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March 2014

March 2014 - sustainability.vic.gov.au/media/resources/documents...  · Web viewUpgrading of street lighting for Bass Coast, South Gippsland, East Gippsland, Wellington and Baw Baw

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March 2014

Contents

Introduction 4

Regions by WRRG's and councils 5

SV contacts for regions (December 2014) 7

Acronyms 9

Regional features 11Key facts 12Demography 12Political context 13Regional context 13Regional priorities 14Economic profile 15Industry profile 15Key Points 16Funded sustainability project examples 17SWOT analysis 18

Further reading 19

Sustainability VictoriaLevel 28, Urban Workshop50 Lonsdale Street Melbourne 3000

T 1300 363 744E [email protected]

© Sustainability Victoria 2014

Printed on 100% recycled paper

Disclaimer

Information in this document is current as at February 2014. While all professional care has been taken in preparing this document, Sustainability Victoria accepts no liability for loss or damages incurred as a result of reliance placed upon its content.

Introduction

This document provides a snapshot of the Gippsland region. It is not an exhaustive compilation of regional information, but instead focuses on information that is considered relevant to SV’s priority outcomes in integrated waste management and resource efficiency.

It has been produced by SV’s Strategic Coordinator based in the region. Information has been drawn from plans and strategies, including regional strategic plans and growth plans, and other documents, as well as discussions with key regional personnel.

This document aims to assist SV staff to understand regional conditions so that SV and our stakeholders (e.g. Waste and Resource and Recovery Groups) can

• Work more effectively across the portfolio• Design and develop relevant programs and projects • Prepare their business plans.

Regions by WRRG and councils

Region WRRG and Executive Officer LGA/councils

Barwon South West

Barwon South West WRRG

EO Sandra McClelland

Colac Otway Shire Council

Greater Geelong City Council

Queenscliff Borough Council

Surf Coast Shire Council

Corangamite Shire Council

Glenelg Shire Council

Moyne Shire Council

Southern Grampians Shire Council

Warrnambool City Council

Gippsland Gippsland RWMG

EO Mathew Peake

Bass Coast Shire Council

Baw Baw Shire Council

East Gippsland Shire Council

Latrobe City Council

South Gippsland Shire Council

Wellington Shire Council

Grampians Grampians Central West WRRG

EO Philip Clingin

Hindmarsh Shire Council

West Wimmera Shire Council

Ararat Rural City Council

Horsham Rural City Council

Northern Grampians Shire Council

Yarriambiack Shire Council

Ballarat City Council

Central Goldfields Shire Council

Golden Plains Shire Council

Hepburn Shire Council

Moorabool Shire Council

Pyrenees Shire Council

Hume Goulburn Valley WRRG

EO Nick Nagle

Campaspe Shire Council

Greater Shepparton City Council

Mitchell Shire Council

Moira Shire Council

Murrindindi Shire Council

Strathbogie Shire Council

North East WRRG

EO Brooke Hermans

Alpine Shire Council

Benalla Rural City Council

Indigo Shire Council

Mansfield Shire Council

Towong Shire Council

Wangaratta Rural City Council

Wodonga Rural City Council

(and three Alpine resorts)

Loddon Mallee Loddon Mallee WRRG

EO Karen Fazzani

Greater Bendigo City Council

Macedon Ranges Shire Council

Mount Alexander Shire Council

Buloke Shire Council

Gannawarra Shire Council

Loddon Shire Council

Swan Hill Rural City Council

Mildura Rural City Council

SV contacts for regions (December 2014)

Division Barwon South West

Gippsland Grampians Hume Loddon-Mallee

Engagement

Statewide Engagement Team

Manager : Andrew Straker (03) 8626 8813

Strategic Coordinators

Amy O’Brien

0418 149068

Luke Wilkinson

0427 850 478

Trish Kevin

0409 060109

Martina Rienzner

0408 110 431

Kristy Roche

0419 311 765

Education Team

Manager : Kate Greer (03) 8626 8878

Claire Ruedin

(03) 86268747

Simon Hum

(03) 8626 8793

Candyce Presland

(03) 86268774

Simon Hum

(03) 86268793

Candyce Presland

(03) 86268774

Integrated Waste Management

Waste and Resource Recovery Strategy

Manager : David Cocks (03) 86268765

Barwon South WestAndrew Buzacott

(03) 86566701

Marcus Fogarty

(03) 86268788

Gippsland Grampians Central WestNick Bailey

(03) 86268824

Ben Stephenson

(03) 86268807

Goulburn ValleyNicola Thom

(03) 86268726

North East David Cocks

(03) 86268765

Loddon MalleeDavid Cocks

(03) 86268765

Nick Bailey

(03) 86268824

Kelly Wickham

(03) 86268820

Resource Efficiency

Business Productivity Team

Manager: Katrina Woolfe (03) 86268823

Yolanda Sztarr

(03) 86268843

Nick Katsanevakis

(03) 86268755

Andrew Haus

(03) 86268874

Helen Scott

(03) 86268855

Kel Dummett

(03) 86268729

Acronyms

ABS Australian Bureau of Statistics

ALP Australian Labor Party

CBD Central Business District

CMA Catchment Management Authority

DSDBI Department of State Development, Business and Innovation

DEECD Department of Education and Early Childhood Development

DTPLI Department of Transport, Planning and Local Infrastructure

DEPI Department of Environment and Primary Industries

EEIG Energy Efficiency Information Grant

EPA Environmental Protection Agency

HACC Home and community care

IWM Integrated waste management

kV Kilovolts (equivalent to 1000 volts)

LGA Local government area

LP Liberal Party of Australia

LPO Litter Prevention Officer

MAC Ministerial Advisory Committee on Waste and Resource Recovery Governance Reform, 2013

NP National Party of Australia

RDA Regional Development Australia

RDV Regional Development Victoria

ResourceSmart AuSSI Vic

ResourceSmart Australian Sustainable Schools Initiative Victoria

RMF Regional Management Forum

RWMG Regional Waste Management Group (now Waste and Resource Recovery group)

SME Small to medium sized enterprise

SV Sustainability Victoria

SV2015 SV’s Strategic Plan 2012–15

TAFE Technical and Further Education

VECCI Victorian Employers' Chamber of Commerce and Industry

WRRG Waste and Resource Recovery Group

Strategic Regional Coordinators

Luke WilkinsonDEPI office, Traralgon

T 1300 363 744M 0427 850 478

Martina ReinznerDEPI office, Seymour

T 5735 4330M 0408 110 431

Kristy RocheDEPI office, Epsom

T 5430 4544M 0419 311 765

Trish KevinDEPI office, Ballarat

T 5336 6856M 0409 060 109

Amy O’BrienDEPI office,Colac

T 5233 5549M 0418 149 068

Kim JohnsonRay LiversidgeSV office Melbourne

T 1300 363 744

Region Gippsland Hume Loddon Mallee Grampians Barwon South West

Population 260,766 309,986 278,395 224,636 373,191

Regional Profiles – Gippsland | 1 1

Regional features

Features Details

Subregion Gippsland WRRG Bass Coast Shire Council

Baw Baw Shire Council

East Gippsland Shire Council

Latrobe City Council

South Gippsland Shire Council

Wellington Shire CouncilRegional centres

Wonthaggi, Leongatha, Warragul, Morwell, Traralgon, Bairnsdale, Sale

Geographical features Latrobe Valley, Gippsland Lakes and Ninety Mile Beach, Wilsons Promontory, Great Dividing Range

Transport Princess Highway and rail corridor through the Latrobe Valley to the NSW border. Bass and South Gippsland Highways.

These routes provide access to national and international freight hubs at the Port of Melbourne and Melbourne Airport.

Major roads and travel times

From To Route Distance (km)

Travel time (hours)

Melbourne Traralgon Princess Highway

163 1:50

Melbourne Mallacoota Princess Highway

513 5:55

Melbourne Bairnsdale Princess Highway

281 3:12

Wonthaggi Traralgon 111 1:24

Key infrastructure • Latrobe Valley’s electricity generation and network• Longford gas plant• Federation University campus in central Gippsland• Macalister Irrigation District• Wonthaggi Desalination Plant

Regional Profiles – Gippsland | 12

Key facts Natural Assets• The Latrobe Valley provides over 80% of Victoria’s electricity, with large reserves of brown coal

and over 90% of Victoria’s natural gas.• Nearly half of Australia’s oil comes from the Bass Strait fields.• The 4.6 million Ha of Gippsland’s land mass is made up of 73% forest and 27% other uses,

predominately rural and urban use.• The region is home to one of Australia’s strongest dairy industries due to rich soil and dependable

rainfall. • The region supplies 60% of Melbourne’s water. The Wonthaggi Desalination Plant was completed

in December 2012 and the region includes the Macalister Irrigation District, which provides water security for farmers in irrigated diary and horticulture sectors.

• Public Native Forestry harvestable in the region occupies 9% of the region’s land mass, and makes up to 45% of wood production. Plantation Forestry occupies 2% of the region and delivers 54%of regions wood production. Wellington LGA has 52% of the region’s plantations, Latrobe LGA has 26% and Baw Baw South Gippsland and East Gippsland have fewer than 10% each.

Industry• Associated dairy food processing has a significant presence with clusters associated with West

and South Gippsland.• The Eastern half of the region is home to several Australian food brands (e.g. Patties Foods and

Vegco) and Victoria’s largest fishing port is at Lakes Entrance, where offshore and inshore fishing vessels are protected by a safe harbour.

• There is extensive energy generation and distribution infrastructure in the region’s central corridor, primarily supplying electricity and gas to Melbourne and beyond. There are gas and electricity links from the region to Tasmania and NSW.

• A large proportion of Gippsland is not supplied with domestic reticulated natural gas, and the electricity distribution network has minimal additional capacity available for both lower voltage and high voltage industry.

• A new ExxonMobil Gas Conditioning Plan began construction in December 2013. The facility is expected to be operational in 2016 at Longford which will be the biggest on the eastern sea board.

DemographyPopulation: 269,790 (approx.)

• Gippsland has one of the highest dispersed populations with over 100,000 residents (40% of the regional population) located in towns of less than 1000 people.

• Gippsland males have the lowest life expectancy when compared with any other region in Victoria; 53% of the population are overweight or obese and 49% are smokers.

Population growth is projected to increase to 306,600 by 2026. Between 2010 and 2022, the population of Bass Coast is expected to grow by 32.5% and the population of Baw Baw by 29.5%. Plan Melbourne’s strategy to 2050 identified Wonthaggi and Drouin/Warragul as new population and employment towns for growth as a strategy for managing growth in Melbourne’s peri-urban regions.

Regional Profiles – Gippsland | 1 3

Political context The previous federal and current state government had a cooperative arrangement in place to support the transition of the Latrobe Valley economy to a low carbon future. The status of this is yet to be determined.

Level Representative

Federal

Darren Chester NP Member for Gippsland

Russell Broadbent LP Member for McMillan

State-Victorian Legislative Assembly

Gary Blackwood LIB (Narracan)

Ken Smith LIB (Bass)

Peter Ryan NP (Gippsland South)

Russell Northe NP (Morwell)

Tim Bull NP (Gippsland East)

State-Victorian Legislative Council Eastern Victoria

Peter Hall NP

Phillip Davis LP

Edward O’Donohue LP

Johan Scheffer ALP

Matt Viney ALP

Regional context• Gippsland was due to deliver its Regional Growth Plan in late 2013, incorporating the Integrated

Land Use Plan. This plan is underpinned by four guiding principles with key objectives as follows:o Principle 1: Strengthen economic resilience by growing a more diverse economy

which is supported by new investment, innovation, and value-adding in traditional strengths.

o Principle 2: Promote a healthy environment by valuing Gippsland’s environmental and heritage assets, and by minimising the region’s exposure to natural hazards and risks.

o Principle 3: Develop sustainable communities through a settlement framework comprising major urban centres which ensure residents have convenient access to jobs, services, infrastructure, and community facilities.

o Principle 4: Deliver timely and accessible infrastructure to meet regional needs for transport, utilities and community facilities.

• The Latrobe Valley Industry and Employment Roadmap is an RDV plan due to be completed in 2014 supported by RDA to transition the three Latrobe Valley councils (Baw Baw, Latrobe City and Wellington) to a low carbon economy. The Roadmap was supported by a $20 million Latrobe Valley Infrastructure Fund to help grow jobs in other sectors and diversify the economy.

Regional Profiles – Gippsland | 14

• The CarbonNet Project investigates the potential for carbon capture and storage in the Gippsland region as part of several possible solutions to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions and address climate change.

• The new Coastal Settlements of the Future program will focus initially on Lakes Entrance and Port Welshpool; helping these communities mitigate risk, protect vital infrastructure, and adapt to climate change.

• RDV funded ClimateWorks Australia to develop the Low Carbon Growth Plan for Gippsland in 2011. The plan identifies activities to save businesses and households $100 million per year across the region through improved energy efficiency, increased land productivity and cleaner distributed energy.

• Fuelled for Growth: Investing in Victoria’s biofuels and bioenergy industries (2012) stated that Gippsland has potential biomass resources mostly related to forestry and livestock. This has stimulated international interest in future investment and development.

Regional prioritiesThe Gippsland Regional Strategic Plan in 2010 identified ten key focus areas:

• Gippsland Low Carbon Economy Transition Plan: • Post-secondary education• Gippsland’s gateways: build the region’s exports • Centre for Sustainable Industries: develop a local presence with Monash (now Federation)

University to carry out research and development on technology and practices that support sustainable resource use of brown coal and water to strengthen the resilience of the regional economy

• Gippsland Lakes Sustainable Development Framework• Health and wellbeing outcomes• Gippsland Integrated Land Use Plan: direction and priorities to address population growth across

the region including changes to land use and infrastructure development• Gippsland’s water• Broadband connectivity• Tourism infrastructure.

Gippsland is now taking a new approach with four strategy groups established to support the 2010 Gippsland Regional Plan, with members from RMF, RDA, the Committee for Gippsland and the Gippsland Local Government Network. The groups focus on the following themes that incorporate the ten priorities:

• economic development• health and wellbeing• environment and natural resources management• low carbon transition.

These strategic groups are collating priority projects and proposals to approach government and industry for support, as multi-themed projects can attract greater regional support. It resulted in Gippsland’s peak advocacy group, One Gippsland, identifying four priorities for the region in June 2013 that it took to Canberra for Federal support. This included;

• The full duplication of the Princes Highway between Traralgon and Sale; • Funding to complete phase one of the Macalister Irrigation District (MID) modernisation program,• The Latrobe Regional Hospital stage 2a redevelopment; • East Sale as the preferred destination for Defence project 5428;• Construction of the East West Link and North East Link road projects

Regional Profiles – Gippsland | 1 5

Economic profileGippsland has a working population of close to 100,000 which is concentrated around the Latrobe Valley and Southern Gippsland areas. The unemployment rate was 5% (Sept 2012), compared with 5.2% across Victoria. Gippsland’s regional economy generates an estimated $26.9 billion (gross revenue generated by businesses/organisations). Total employment in the Gippsland region is 89,386 jobs.

Industry profile

LGA Characteristics Jobs Gross revenue

(estimated)

Pop Municipal

centre

Industries Number % of region

$ billion

% of region

Bass

Coast

29,614 Wonthaggi

(Pop 6,528)

Tourism

Agriculture

11,303 12.65% $3,522 13.07%

Baw Baw 42,864 Warragul

(Pop 11,491)

Agriculture Manufacturing

14,127 15.80% $3,546 13.16%

East

Gippsland

42,196 Bairnsdale

(Pop 11,271)

Tourism

Forestry

Agriculture

14,147 15.83% $3,389 12.58%

Latrobe 73,564 Morwell

(Pop 13,942)

Future energy

Sector

Service and

manufacturing

25,620 28.66% $8,670 32.18%

South

Gippsland

27,208 Leongatha

(Pop 4,505)

Tourism

Agriculture

9,997 11.18% $2,747 10.19%

Wellington 41,440 Sale

(Pop 13,337)

Oil and gas

extraction

Timber

Agriculture

Tourism

14,192 15.88% $5,051 18.74%

Total 256,886 89,386 100% $26,945 100%

The top five employment sectors

1. Health and community services (11,926)

2. Retail trade (10,902)

3. Construction (8,136)

4. Education (8,035)

Regional Profiles – Gippsland | 16

5. Manufacturing (7,823)

The top five industry sectors

1. Manufacturing

2. Construction

3. Mining

4. Property services

5. Utility services

Key Points• Food related activity in the Gippsland region generates more than $2 billion in exports, more than

14,000 jobs and is responsible for more than $1.3 billion in expenditure on goods and services within the region. The Gippsland Food Plan was to be delivered in 2013 to direct the future development/positioning of the Gippsland food system as a state and national food bowl.

• The 2013/14 State budget allocated $14million to the Macalister Irrigation Districts modernisation project. This is home to significant diary and horticulture assets

• The 2013/14 state budget allocated $110million over 4 years to further investigate the development and expansion of the Hastings Port as a major container port.

• The central western part of Gippsland is strongly linked to the mining and utilities industries.• The largest proportion of land mass in Victoria granted to coal seam gas exploration is located in

Gippsland. The State Government currently has a moratorium on extraction.• East Gippsland has attracted investment around agriculture, timber production, horticulture,

manufacturing, tourism, retail and service, commercial fishing and other marine industries. The region is home to several Australian food brands and Victoria’s largest fishing port at Lakes Entrance.

• Gippsland has a thriving dairy industry with more than 2,500 licensed dairy farms. The main production areas are in the west and south of the region, including 11 processing plants and two research institutes at Maffra and Ellinbank. Dairy dominates Gippsland exports with $762 million. The Gippsland dairy industry is bigger than NSW, South Australia and Tasmania combined. There is a number of dairy processing plants with in increasing focus on export markets, operate in the Gippsland. These include Murray Goulburn Co-operative, Burra Foods, United Dairy Power, Parmalat and National Foods. VIPLUS has recently invested in reopening diary processing at Toora.

Regional Profiles – Gippsland | 1 7

Funded sustainability project examplesRecent SV projects • Energy efficiency for schools- 18 schools successful in the Region

• SRSB Energy and Materials- 4 Capital Grant recipients in Round 1 and 2

• Landfill Liners – Latrobe, East Gippsland, South Gippsland, Bass Coast, Wellington

• Roadside Litter Grants-South Gippsland and Bass Coast• Regional organics (Mallacoota)• Public Place Recycling (South Gippsland, Baw Baw, Bass Coast)

Current SV projects • Gippsland WRRG projects including Organics Strategy, and Data Collection

• ResourceSmart AuSSI Vic (Gippsland Consortia)

Third party sustainability projects

• Energy efficiency assessments at 190 dairy farms in Gippsland (EEIG)• Upgrading of street lighting for Bass Coast, South Gippsland, East

Gippsland, Wellington and Baw Baw Councils• Pilot targeting HACC clients in retrofit, education and ongoing support

for energy efficiency (South East Councils Climate Change Alliance).• Exploring sustainable agriculture approaches, including use of recycled

organics to improve productivity (West Gippsland CMA)• Two LPOs funded across Bass Coast/South Gippsland and

Wellington/East Gippsland until• 2012–13• Delivering state-wide energy efficiency information to Victorian SMEs

(VECCI funded by EEIG)• Developing a Renewable Energy Demonstration Trailer and providing

real life demonstration of energy efficiency and renewables at regional events (GippsTAFE)

Regional Profiles – Gippsland | 18

SWOT analysis

Strengths

• Proximity and access to Melbourne• Established transport infrastructure (road

and rail, energy)• Diverse economic drivers• Number of regional networks and bodies

already exist (waste, economic, tourism, agriculture, local government)

• Abundance of natural resource assets• Employment and training opportunities• Significant organic waste processing

infrastructure• Energy generation and distribution

infrastructure

Opportunities

• Reducing costs and increasing inward investment through the Low Carbon Growth Plan for Gippsland

• Identifying additional regional projects and starting discussions between stakeholders for the Gippsland Regional Growth Plan (GRP)

• Looking for support and funding from other levels of government for GRP projects, for example, developing the Gippsland logistics precinct and upgrading priority tourism roads

• Strong interest from government and industry in using cost effective moisture removal technologies from brown coal and exporting this internationally

• Potentially large local markets for recovered and processed organic waste in land use

• Significant external commercial interest in food processing and biomass

• Improving the function, capacity and amenity of the region’s commercial centres

Weaknesses

• Uncertainty as to what the focus of state and federal governments relating to Latrobe Valley transition to low carbon economy will be.

• Significant areas socio-economic disadvantage limits participation in the local economy.

• Perception that the region only reliance is on fossil fuel sector limits acknowledging the diversity of the regional economy

Threats

• Ageing population and net migration of young people

• Large geography and dispersed population• Impacts of climate change and associated

policies on key industries (farming, forestry and mining). Buildings and infrastructure may be at risk from flooding and storm surges along the coast and from bushfires inland

• Energy sector facing significant challenges due to global shift to a low carbon economy

• Transition to low carbon economy stagnates due to policy uncertainty

1 9 | Regional Profiles – Further reading

Further reading

This section provides a list of organisations providing regional development information in Victoria.

All web addresses are correct as at June 2013.

ClimateWorks Australia

ClimateWorks Australia publishes a number of plans related to lowering emissions, including the low carbon growth plans for Geelong and Gippsland.

www.climateworksaustralia.org/publications.html

Council websites

Most councils publish economic reports and statistics on their websites. A full list of councils with websites is available on the Department of Transport, Planning and Local Infrastructure website.

http://www.dpcd.vic.gov.au/localgovernment/find-your-local-council

Department of State Development, Business and Innovation (DSDBI)

DSDBI has published an Industry Atlas of Victoria (2011).

www.dsdbi.vic.gov.au/research-reports/industry-atlas-of-victoria

Regional Development Victoria (RDV)

RDV provides regional development summaries on the five regions and publishes regional and subregional growth plans and strategic plans.

www.rdv.vic.gov.au/victorian-regions.

Fuelled for Growth: The 2012 Ernst and Young report on bioenergy (Fuelled for Growth: Investing in Victoria’s biofuels and bioenergy industries) is available for download at

www.rdv.vic.gov.au/business-and-industry-programs/biofuels-and-bioenergy.

Department of Transport, Planning and Local Infrastructure (DTPLI)

DTPLI publishes regional and subregional growth plans and strategic plans for Victorian regions.

http://www.dpcd.vic.gov.au/planning/projects-and-programs/regionalgrowthplans/

Profile.id

Profile.id uses the 2011 Census to provide comprehensive, online, socio-demographic profiles

of local government areas.

www.home.id.com.au/id-community/local-govt-products/profileid.

WRRG websites

The WRRGs publish business plans and annual reports on their websites. For a full list of WRRGs and their websites, see contact details listed on the SV website: www.sustainability.vic.gov.au.