Council adopts revised Industrial Land Strategy and Amendment C282gben

Source: New South Wales Ministerial News

Council has voted to adopt the revised Greater Bendigo Industrial Land Development Strategy (2025) and the Greater Bendigo Industrial Development Guidelines (2025), as well as adopting Planning Scheme Amendment C282gben, following a Council meeting earlier this week.

These documents work together to provide clear direction around the use of existing industrial land and to provide a 30-year pipeline of industrial land for our growing city.

Planning Scheme Amendment C282gben helps to implement the revised Greater Bendigo Industrial Land Development Strategy (GBILDS) by making changes to the Municipal Planning Strategy and the Planning Policy Framework of the Greater Bendigo Planning Scheme.

The Amendment also supports the proposed Bendigo Regional Employment Precinct (BREP) and rezones land at 1029 Calder Highway, Maiden Gully from Industrial 1 Zone to Public Conservation and Resource Zone.

Acting Manager Strategic Planning Lauren Watt said adoption of the Amendment follows public exhibition and submissions.

“Amendment C282gben was publicly exhibited from October 31 to December 5, 2024, with 13 submissions received,” Ms Watt said.

“A Panel Hearing was held on May 20, 2025. The Panel considered all the submissions and three parties also presented to the Panel.

“The Panel concluded that most changes proposed by City officers in response to submissions were appropriate, with only two minor changes recommended.

“We will now submit Amendment C282gben to the Minister for Planning for approval.”

Amendment C282gben also includes the adoption and implementation of the new Greater Bendigo Industrial Development Guidelines that will replace the Good Design Guide for Industry 1997. The new guidelines outline how future industrial areas should look, function and perform. 
 

Cyber Security TAFE Centre of Excellence opens

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

Tailored cyber courses will be developed to address emerging skills gaps across the nation.

In brief:

  • A national hub for cyber skills and innovation launched in Canberra.
  • It will serve as a cyber security hub for TAFEs across Australia.
  • It will give future cyber students the opportunity to build on their cyber-security skills.

A national hub for cyber skills and innovation has opened in Canberra.

The Cyber Security TAFE Centre of Excellence is located at the Canberra Institute of Technology (CIT) Woden campus.

It will build on existing initiatives in the ACT, including:

  • the Canberra Cyber Hub
  • the Canberra Innovation Network.

The Centre will partner with CIT’s Electric Vehicle (EV) TAFE Centre of Excellence to identify cyber risks in electric vehicles.

Up-skilling our next generation of students

The Centre will:

  • give future students the opportunity to build on their cyber-security skills
  • provide students the opportunity to learn from the best in government, industry and business
  • train students to identify, tackle and prevent national cyber threats
  • provide skills to boost cyber literacy across Australia’s workforce.

Tailored cyber courses will be developed to address emerging skills gaps across the nation.

These will include initiatives for:

  • senior secondary students
  • cross-sector workers
  • final-year trades students aspiring to become small business owners.

A national hub for cyber security

The Centre will serve as a hub for TAFEs across Australia.

Providing professional learning with a focus on strengthening Australia’s sovereign cyber security capability, areas of focus include energy, utilities and critical infrastructure.

The Centre will help to build a pipeline of cyber-ready workers by fast-tracking higher and degree-equivalent apprenticeship pathways and developing micro credentials for university graduates.

This will be the 13th TAFE Centre of Excellence announced across Australia.

The project was jointly funded by the ACT Government and the Federal Government.

TAFE Centres of Excellence foster collaboration between TAFEs and key stakeholders including employers, unions and universities.

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Two injured in serious crash at Spreyton

Source: New South Wales Community and Justice

Two injured in serious crash at Spreyton

Tuesday, 16 September 2025 – 9:57 pm.

Police are investigating a serious traffic crash involving a black Holden Commodore and white Nissan Navara on Sheffield Road, at Spreyton, today (Tuesday).
Police and emergency services were called to the scene of the head-on collision about 4:10pm.
The drivers of both vehicles – a man aged in his 70s and a second man in his early 60s – were taken to Launceston General Hospital with serious injuries.
They were the sole occupants of their vehicles and no one else was injured as a result of the collision.
The road was closed for several hours to allow crash investigators to examine the scene and conduct inquiries.
Police would like to thank motorists for their patience and understanding.
Anyone with information, or dash-cam or CCTV footage of the incident, is asked to contact police on 131 444.

City launches series to reduce landfill waste

Source: South Australia Police

Learn how you can send less to landfill by attending one of our free workshops this October and November.

The City is coordinating a variety of events, workshops and tours as part of the Less to Landfill Series.

The initiative will focus on reducing individual waste impact and increasing the understanding of resource recovery.

Events and workshops include sustainable gardening, plant swaps, sewing and community tours of Good Sammys, Containers for Change, and a local recycling facility.

On October 11, you can also take part in an unofficial world record mending attempt and help keep textiles out of landfill at our Great Global Mend event, delivered in partnership with the City of Stirling.

Full Less to Landfill event schedule:

Gardening in small spaces

Join the Youth team for a sustainable gardening workshop and learn tricks and tips for helping your garden flourish in a small space. For ages 8 to 18 years.

  • 11.30am to 1.30pm, Thursday 2 October at Clarkson Youth Centre
  • No registration required.

Plant swap and wicking bed workshop at Cockman House

Explore the oldest house in Wanneroo, participate in a plant swap and learn how to build an instant water efficient wicking bed for growing plants out of found items.

To join in the plant swap, simply bring a small healthy plant, cutting or seedling to that fits into one of these categories: Seeds, indoor plants, herbs, vegetables or flowers.

  • 1.30 to 4pm, Sunday 5 October at Cockman House (plant swap running during CH opening hours no bookings required. Bookings are required for the wicking bed workshop 2.30 – 3.45pm)
  • Find out more here.

The Great Global Mend

Take part in an unofficial world record mending attempt and help keep textiles out of landfill at our Great Global Mend event!

We’ve partnered with the City of Stirling to host a dedicated mending, clothes swap and sustainability focused event as part of our Less to Landfill series.

Bring your own clothing, cushion or other fabric item to mend, get tips from local community sewing groups, take part in a mini clothes swap event and get ready to join in the world record attempt.

  • 10am to 12pm, Saturday 11 October at Girrawheen Hub

Mending and Alterations Workshop

Hem your pants, mend a tear or sew a button at this free mending workshop! Develop the confidence and skills to learn simple hand and sewing machine techniques.

  • 1pm to 4pm, Saturday 18 October at Wanneroo Library and Cultural Centre
  • Find out more here.

Community tour of Good Sammys and Containers for Change

Learn how giving quality items a second life can have a positive impact on this free tour of Containers for Change and Good Sammy stores in Wanneroo, Butler and Clarkson.

The tour includes lunch, a 10 per cent discount on all purchases made during the tour and a $10 Good Sammy gift card to spend instore.

  • 8.30am to 3pm, Wednesday 22 October, departing Wanneroo Civic Centre
  • Register online here.

Fix your op shop finds

Learn hand and machine sewing techniques to fix your op shop finds, or mend, alter and upcycle garments you already own at this free workshop.

  • 1pm to 4pm, Saturday 25 October at Wanneroo Library and Cultural Centre
  • Register online here.

National Recycling Week Community tour of recycling facilities

Visit the Cleanaway Material Recovery Facility and CLAW Environmental to learn how your recycling is sorted and processed on this free interactive waste facility tour.

  • 8.30am to 3.30pm, Tuesday 11 November, departing Wanneroo Civic Centre
  • Register online here.

Keep up to date on the City’s events at wanneroo.wa.gov.au/events.

Man charged following robbery in Rokeby

Source: New South Wales Community and Justice

Man charged following robbery in Rokeby

Tuesday, 16 September 2025 – 4:07 pm.

A 22-year-old man has been charged with aggravated robbery in relation to an incident on Ralph Terrace at Rokeby on Sunday morning.
Police will allege that about 1.15am, the man confronted and assaulted another man and stole a number of items from him including keys and a phone.
The victim was transported to Royal Hobart Hospital with non-life-threatening facial injuries.
South East Criminal Investigation Branch (CIB) identified and located the offender who has been detained to appear before the Hobart Magistrates Court later today.
Anyone who has information in relation to the incident, or CCTV of the area around the time, is asked to contact South East CIB on 131 444 and quote OR784908.
Information can also be provided anonymously through Crime Stoppers Tasmania at crimestopperstas.com.au or on 1800 333 000.
Police believe this to be an isolated incident and there is no ongoing risk to the public.

Safer heavy vehicle speeds on the M2 and Lane Cove tunnel with Average Speed Cameras installed

Source: Mental Health Australia

Road safety on the M2 motorway and Lane Cove tunnel will receive a boost with the installation of an Average Speed Cameras length targeting heavy vehicle speeding offences.

The new length covers 26 km between Baulkham Hills at the start of the M2 and Naremburn on the M1 with the cameras expected to become operational after 22 September 2025.  

The cameras will initially operate in warning mode for a minimum of two months, with heavy vehicle drivers caught speeding at 30 km/h or less over the speed limit sent a warning letter. Heavy vehicle drivers caught speeding at more than 30 km/h over the speed limit will receive a penalty. Fines, demerit points and other penalties will apply to heavy vehicles as normal after the grace period.

Heavy vehicles make up only three per cent of vehicle registrations, and eight per cent of kilometres travelled by NSW vehicles, however, they account for around 19 per cent of road fatalities.

Research shows that Average Speed Cameras dramatically reduce the number of serious crashes along a length of road.

Fatal and serious injury crashes involving heavy vehicles fell by 42 per cent on Average Speed Camera lengths during the five years between 2018 and 2022.

Average speed enforcement works by measuring the amount of time it takes a heavy vehicle to drive between two points which are a known distance apart. The average speed that the heavy vehicle travelled between the two points can then be calculated.

Fines from heavy vehicle Average Speed Cameras go directly into the Community Road Safety Fund to deliver targeted road safety initiatives in NSW.

To sign up for alerts to changes in camera locations, visit www.saferroadsnsw.com.au
 

A Hedge Between Keeps Friendship Green: Could Global Fragmentation Change the Way Australian Investors Think About Currency Risk?

Source: Airservices Australia

Introduction

It is a privilege to be invited to address the Board of CLS – or ‘Continuous Linked Settlement’ in longhand – on what I believe is your first meeting in Australia.

CLS is hardly a household name. But what it lacks in ‘rizz’, it more than makes up in the critical role it plays in the international financial architecture: massively reducing the risk of settlement failure in the global foreign exchange (FX) market.

As you all know, but is worth repeating for a wider audience, settlement risk is a particularly important issue in FX markets because of the time differences between the major currency blocs. It would be all too easy to pay away one leg of FX transactions during the business hours of that currency, in anticipation of the return leg being paid when the other country wakes up – only to find that second leg interrupted, leaving large, unsettled liabilities. Exactly that happened when the Cologne-based Bankhaus Herstatt was liquidated in 1974 at the end of German banking hours – after Deutsche Mark payments had been made, but before the return US dollar legs had settled. Chaos ensued.

The sums involved in FX markets are truly massive – over US$7.5 trillion a day in 2022, and set to have grown substantially since then. So getting this right matters critically for financial stability. The CLS solution seems obvious today: ensure that payments on both legs are made simultaneously, in central bank money, in each national real time gross settlement system. But it was 22 years after Herstatt before the international community settled on this plan, and another six before CLS opened for business in 2002. So I suppose it shouldn’t be surprising that it’s taken another 23 years to welcome the Board to Sydney!

From the start, Australia has been a close partner in CLS’s development. The Australian dollar was one of the seven founding CLS currencies – so we’ve had an operational relationship with you, every day, since the very beginning. On the regulatory side, too, CLS is categorised as a systemically important international payment system in Australia; and we sit on the regulatory college for CLS, chaired by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

The Australian dollar itself has long punched above its weight in global markets. It had the sixth highest daily turnover of any currency in the 2022 BIS Triennial survey, despite Australia ranking only 11th by nominal GDP at the time (Table 1). None of the other top 10 currencies in Table 1 has that level of outperformance while operating a completely free float.

Table 1: Major Currencies Ranked by FX Turnover and GDP (2022)
Currency FX turnover share(a) Nominal GDP share(b)
(rank in parenthesis)
CLS eligible(c) ?
US dollar 89.5 27.5 (1) Yes
Euro 30.9 15.3 (3) Yes
Japanese yen 16.9 4.5 (4) Yes
British pound 13 3.3 (6) Yes
Chinese renminbi 7.1 19.4 (2) No
Australian dollar 6.5 1.8 (11) Yes
Canadian dollar 6.3 2.3 (8) Yes
Swiss franc 5.3 0.9 (16) Yes
Hong Kong dollar 2.6 0.4 (30) Yes
Singapore dollar 2.5 0.5 (23) Yes
Swedish krona 2.3 0.6 (21) Yes
Korean won 1.9 1.9 (10) Yes
Norwegian krone 1.7 0.6 (20) Yes
New Zealand dollar 1.7 0.3 (35) Yes
Indian rupee 1.6 3.5 (5) No
Mexican peso 1.5 1.6 (12) Yes
New Taiwan dollar 1.1 0.8 (17) No
South African rand 1 0.4 (27) Yes
Brazilian real 0.9 2.1 (9) No
Danish krone 0.7 0.4 (29) Yes
Polish zloty 0.7 0.7 (18) No
Thai baht 0.4 0.5 (25) No
Israeli new shekel 0.4 0.6 (22) Yes

(a) Share of global average daily turnover, measured on a net-net basis against all other currencies. The sum of percentage shares of individual currencies totals 200 per cent because two currencies are involved in each transaction, Data are from the BIS 2022 Triennial Survey; the results from the 2025 Survey will be released later this month. The sample of currencies is limited to those with the largest turnover rates, but all reported currencies were included in calculations.
(b) GDP data are measured in US dollars as of 2022 and are sourced from the IMF. GDP share and rank are both relative to the sample of economies with currencies in the BIS Triennial Survey.
(c) The Hungarian forint is also eligible for CLS settlement but falls below the FX turnover cutoff used in Table 1.

That special status reflects three main things:

  1. As a major commodity exporter, Australia’s economic conditions are sensitive to the outlook for global growth; Australian dollar assets have therefore been seen as a good way for investors to manage their risk, gaining ‘risk on’ exposure by going long, or hedging risk by going short.
  2. Australia’s geographical position, its openness to capital and its developed FX hedging markets, mean it was historically used to gain proxy-exposure to Asian economies whose currencies are harder to invest in, or where it is harder to issue debt.
  3. Australia’s superannuation (or pension) funds are investing an ever-increasing amount overseas. Even today, the sums are huge: Australian retirement savings are the fourth largest in the world, with assets equivalent to around 150 per cent of Australian GDP, half of which are offshore. And that is set to grow further: within a decade the sector will be the second largest globally, with assets rising to around 180 per cent of GDP, and an overseas portfolio share approaching three-quarters.

All of this may be great news for Australian dollar volumes! But it also puts us bang at the heart of a quite exceptional period of uncertainty about the future direction of the global economic and financial system. Some argue we are on the verge of a fundamental shift, with the world breaking into rival, fragmented trading blocks, and a collapse in US dollar hegemony. Others wonder if this may all be a bit overblown, with the global trading system proving more robust, and the US dollar’s role too embedded, to see a serious challenge – for now, at least.

I cannot hope to resolve these profound questions today, but I do want to look at what this uncertainty may mean for Australian investors, and particularly the super funds, as they look out into a turbulent world – and how it could affect the ways they think about managing currency risk in their global portfolios, both now and in the years ahead.

Through a hedge backwards: Australia’s natural advantage?

Australians have always been big overseas investors, both for standard diversification reasons, and because the onshore asset base is relatively small. But they have typically taken only modest levels of protection against FX movements on their riskier overseas asset holdings. The superannuation sector as a whole is estimated to hedge only around one-fifth of the value of its overseas listed equity positions, for example (Graph 1).

Graph 1

To see why that might be, let’s start by reminding ourselves that, other things equal, Australian investors holding US dollar denominated equities are worse off when the Australian dollar appreciates (or equivalently the US dollar depreciates). They can insure against this risk by using FX swaps or forwards to take short positions in the US dollar (against long positions in their own currency). But buying derivatives is often costly – so the benefit from doing so has to justify the cost.

One factor reducing that benefit is the extent to which FX movements can be expected to provide a kind of ‘natural’ hedge against the equity holdings. That would happen in our example if the Australian dollar tended to depreciate against the US dollar when US equity prices fall, offsetting some of the offshore capital losses when converted back to domestic currency. But historically that is exactly what has happened: first, because the US dollar has typically been viewed as a safe haven or ‘risk off’ currency that rises when global conditions are bad; and second, for the reasons I mentioned earlier, the Australian dollar has been seen as one of the standout ‘risk on’ currencies that tend to depreciate when global economic prospects weaken and/or risk-sentiment deteriorates. On that score, the Australian dollar has historically provided a pretty decent ‘natural’ hedge (Graph 2, left hand panel).

Graph 2

If the volatility in the Australian dollar is lower than that in overseas equity returns – as it has been in recent years (Graph 3) – that also reduces the need to take out an explicit hedge, because it just doesn’t form a large part of overall portfolio volatility.

Graph 3

There are several different ways to factor these considerations into a specific quantified hedge ratio. One approach is to calculate the hedge needed to minimise the variance of portfolio returns. I won’t plough through the formalities of how to do that here – and the calculations can be sensitive to assumptions. But the punchline is that – historically speaking – the Australian dollar’s strong correlation with US equities, and its low relative volatility, mean the minimum variance equity hedge ratio has been pretty low. Indeed on some measures it comes quite close to the average levels actually chosen by Australian industry super funds.

For some currencies, such as the Japanese yen, low hedge ratios for US assets have also been driven by high hedging costs, reflecting material differentials in short-term interest rates . But this has not been a dominant factor in Australia (Graph 4).

Graph 4

The times, are they a-changin’?

The debate on everyone’s mind is whether the paradigm underpinning those correlations I’ve just been through is now shifting.

The oft-cited case for the prosecution is that, amidst the huge increase in market uncertainty earlier in 2025 – a situation in which the US dollar would normally be expected to act as a safe haven – the dollar in fact depreciated: falling by around 8 per cent on a trade weighted basis relative to its January peak, with a little under half of this coming in the weeks following the announcement of the Liberation Day tariffs (Graph 5). Dire predictions abounded, including a rumoured mass exodus from US assets, and fears of the end of dollar hegemony in international capital markets.

Graph 5

Uncertainty obviously remains high, and there is still a great deal of water to flow under the bridge. But, to paraphrase Mark Twain, predictions of the death of the US dollar and the Australian hedging model appear somewhat premature, for four main reasons:

  1. There is little evidence yet that international investors have substantially reduced their holdings of US assets: indeed the latest data suggest that foreign capital continues to flow into the US (in net terms), particularly on the equity side (Graph 6). Capital inflows into Australia did pick up a little in the June quarter – but the numbers so far do not look materially out of line with historical averages (Graph 7).

    Graph 6

    Graph 7

  2. The correlation between movements in US equity prices and the Australian dollar remained close to its historical average through the recent market turmoil, with the Australian dollar initially depreciating sharply alongside falling equity prices. That is quite different to correlations with some of the other major currencies (Graph 2, right panel).
  3. Implied volatility in the exchange rate between the Australian dollar and the US dollar has remained lower than that in US equities.
  4. The cost of hedging against FX risk for Australian investors has been little changed (Graph 4).

Investors in some other countries do appear to have increased their hedging ratios in response to Liberation Day, with market attention focused on institutional investors in Europe and parts of Asia. Those additional hedging flows may have played some role in amplifying the US dollar’s decline for a period earlier in the year. In Australia, the super fund sector also increased its equity hedges in the June quarter (Graph 2) – but the pick-up was only small, and market participants report little current expectation of a more material increase in the near term.

Some more structural challenges for super funds’ FX hedging

But none of this means we should be complacent about the scope for a more material regime shift over time. Uncertainty remains elevated, and we are yet to see the full economic implications of the changes to US tariffs play out. It is encouraging therefore that many super funds are strengthening their capacity to think through and manage FX and other liquidity risks.

That also matters because, even if super funds’ average hedge ratios change little in the near term, the size of the market-wide FX hedge book is set to grow significantly over longer horizons, for three reasons:

  1. As I noted at the start, total super fund assets are projected to grow from around 150 per cent to 180 per cent of GDP over the next decade.
  2. The share of this larger pie devoted to overseas assets is set to rise, given the size of the super fund pool relative to the stock of domestic financial assets.
  3. As super funds’ members age over time, they are likely to demand greater certainty of returns, driving super fund portfolios away from equity and towards fixed income. But FX hedge ratios for foreign currency fixed income assets are typically much higher than those for equities, reflecting the very different shape of asset returns and correlations.

The first of these factors alone could see the superannuation sector’s total FX hedge book, currently estimated to be of the order of AUD½ trillion, to double over the next decade. The other two factors will increase this number by some further multiple over the coming years.

Such changes would of course reflect prudent risk management on the part of individual firms. And they would barely touch the sides of a global FX swaps market that exceeds US$100 trillion in stock terms. But they are large relative to the current size of the Australian dollar FX swaps market. And the terms on which FX hedges are typically offered to super funds today are relatively capital-intensive for the swap providers. So it is likely that super funds will have to extend and diversify their pool of hedge providers over time to avoid hitting concentration limits. They may also be asked to meet increased margining and collateral requirements on their hedging positions.

Many super funds are already thinking hard about what these changes could mean for their future liquidity management. One aspect is ensuring they have sufficient resources to meet potential short-run liquidity needs – for example, to cover increased replacement costs for maturing FX hedges if the Australian dollar depreciates. Those potential liquidity needs appear manageable today under most scenarios. But they will grow over time as the hedge book increases in size. And the practice of using relatively short-term derivatives to hedge much longer term investment – though common amongst many institutional investment communities – means super funds are reliant on continuous access to functioning FX derivatives markets. If these markets were to become impaired such that rolling these hedges became difficult or prohibitively expensive, as occurred during episodes of US dollar funding stresses in both 2008 and 2020, super funds would either need to sell foreign assets or face unhedged foreign currency exposures for a period, both of which could be undesirable in a period of market volatility.

Australian banks also rely on the smooth functioning of such markets – in particular, to hedge their foreign-currency denominated funding back to Australian dollars to fund their (mostly) Australian dollar assets. However, their exposure is somewhat mitigated by the fact that their hedges are typically duration-matched to their funding.

System-wide liquidity risks are being explored in APRA’s inaugural system stress test, and we look forward to seeing the results of this work.

Staying on top of FX settlement risk in the region

All of this increased FX activity may seem like good news for FX markets and hence for CLS – and well it may be. But against the backdrop of such a big increase in scale and a huge range of uncertain and unpredictable macro risks, the need to ensure we retain a laser focus on mitigating settlement risk has never been greater.

The first priority, clearly, is to ensure that as many eligible transactions as possible go through CLS. I look forward to seeing the results of the new global survey on FX settlement data, designed by my old colleague Philippe Lintern and team at the Bank of England, and carried out as part of the BIS’ 2025 Triennial exercise. And I would be interested to hear your estimates of how widely Australian firms active in FX use your service. Five years ago, CLS estimated that around 75 per cent of Australia’s 20 largest super funds used CLS to settle their FX trades – which sounded good but left me wondering what the remaining 25 per cent did, and how this number has evolved since then. Perhaps you can enlighten me today! Given the growth expected in that sector it is important to pursue this issue with gusto.

Just as global fragmentation poses risks to the macro outlook, so it also poses risks to the ongoing goal of eliminating FX settlement risk. As Table 1 shows, a number of key currencies in the Asia Pacific region remain outside CLS – specifically the Chinese Renminbi, the India Rupee, the New Taiwan Dollar and the Thai Baht. I do not underestimate the challenges involved, but we should do all we can, where we can. Extended cutoff times for CLS settlement could help with greater global reach too.

Fragmentation, and the geopolitical risks that come with it, poses heightened cyber and operational risks – issues that I know have preoccupied you as a Board for some time.

And of course there is always the possibility that rival payment systems, built on less sound principles could cannibalise transactions that currently go through CLS. I sympathise with you that it can be hard to keep up with the hype cycle on this front – from Distributed Ledgers to Central Bank Digital Currencies to today’s topic du jour, stablecoins. But it is important that you do, because we must ensure that whatever emerges from this process is as robust as what preceded it. That is why, here in Australia, we are experimenting with new ways of enabling central bank money to circulate on innovative payments platforms through Project Acacia. I look forward to hearing an update of CLS’ own work in this area.

Conclusions

Let me conclude.

Your visit comes at a critical moment in the history of the global economic and financial system. Uncertainty is at an all-time high – and many of the principles on which we have long relied are in flux.

Against that backdrop, I have devoted much of my remarks today to reviewing how fragmentation could change the way Australian investors approach currency risk management. So far, little fundamental seems to have changed – the Australian dollar has remained a well-functioning ‘natural’ hedge for global risky assets, and hedging costs are relatively low. But that could all change rapidly – and the structural trends towards growing super fund balances, much of which will have to be invested overseas, makes it ever more important that super funds in particular scale up their risk management and scenario planning capacity. Done successfully that should further add to other resilient features of the system – including the fact that super funds are mostly defined contribution (not defined benefit) schemes, are not levered, and have access to those deep and liquid FX markets that I described earlier.

As a founder currency of CLS, a co-regulator and a leading global currency, we care deeply about furthering the mission of eliminating FX settlement risk. In that context, it is wonderful to see the progress CLS has made, and we look forward to continuing to do all we can to help in that endeavour.

Fatal trailbike crash, Norwood

Source: New South Wales Community and Justice

Fatal trailbike crash, Norwood

Tuesday, 16 September 2025 – 1:59 pm.

Sadly, a 17-year-old boy has died as a result of injuries sustained in a two-vehicle crash at Norwood, Launceston, last Saturday night.
The boy was one of two male teenagers injured in a collision between a trailbike and a Subaru SUV at the roundabout intersection of Boiton Hill Road and Norwood Avenue, about 8.45pm on Saturday.
The teen was a pillion passenger on the trailbike.
A second 17-year-old driving the motorcycle sustained leg and pelvic injuries and is receiving treatment in hospital.
The driver of the SUV was not physically injured.
Anyone with information or relevant dash-cam footage, is asked to contact police on 131 444 or Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or at crimestopperstas.com.au. Information can be provided anonymously. Please quote (reference 000398-13092025) if providing information.
Our thoughts are with the boy’s family and loved ones.
A report will be prepared for the coroner.

Brigades honour a friend and volunteer

Source:

Will, Matilda, Alannah and Karen Wanless, Yarrambat Fire Brigade’s Sue Mountain and Good Friday Appeal’s Claire O’Riordan.

A Plenty Fire Brigade volunteer will be remembered as keen, enthusiastic and humble by Yarrambat and Plenty Fire Brigade volunteers, with two commemorative plaques created in his name.

Respected firefighter Greig Wanless, who passed away in April 2024, was a member of the team each year when the volunteers worked the Yan Yean/Ironbark Rd intersection, collecting donations for The Royal Children’s Hospital Good Friday Appeal.

The Brigade’s annual collection, first organised by Yarrambat Fire Brigade 11 years ago, has raised close to $85,000 for the hospital.

The two brigades will each display a plaque, recording the amount raised each year by their cooperative efforts.

On Sunday 14 Septenber, Yarrambat brigade’s Sue Mountain told a group of people celebrating Greig’s service that he was a regular member of the Good Friday team, a great friend and passionate about the cause of helping the hospital.

In honouring Greig, Claire O’Riordan, Community Fundraising Manager for the Good Friday Appeal, spoke of the commitment of all CFA volunteers to the annual Royal Children’s Hospital Appeal.

“It’s the people’s charity that improves the lives of children, and we will be forever grateful,” Claire said.

Greig’s wife Karen unveiled the plaques at Yarrambat Fire Station on Sunday, with their children Alannah, Matilda and Will, brigade volunteers and Good Friday Appeal representative Claire O’Riordan.

For information about the Good Friday Appeal, go to the official website

  • Greig Wanless
Submitted by Peter Beaton

Discover Canberra through public art trails

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services




Discover Canberra through public art trails – Chief Minister, Treasury and Economic Development Directorate

















As part of ACT Government’s ‘One Government, One Voice’ program, we are transitioning this website across to our . You can access everything you need through this website while it’s happening.


Released 16/09/2025

Australia’s biggest celebration of Spring, Floriade, is underway and the ACT Government is encouraging locals and visitors to see more of Canberra through the release of a special Canberra City Public Art Walking Trail.

Across the territory, more than 150 artworks help tell Canberra’s story reflecting its history, culture, and ongoing transformation. The Canberra City Public Art Walking Trail showcases a selection of these works and offers a unique way to explore the city’s evolving character.

“Public art plays a central role in reflecting our community’s values and inspires us with new stories and experiences. Pairing the public art trail with your Floriade visit is an excellent way to experience Canberra’s vibrant culture and history,” said Minister for Business, Arts and Creative Industries, Michael Pettersson.

This self-paced art walking trail features three possible routes of varying duration and is suitable for all ages and fitness levels. Visit some of Canberra’s best-known public artworks such as Ethos in Civic Square, the city’s first commissioned public artwork created in 1961 by sculptor Tom Bass, and the 2001 aluminium sculpture Ainslie’s Sheep by Les Kossatz whose playful nod to Canberra’s pastoral roots offers a satirical take on the city’s rural past.

In addition to these well-known artworks is Glorious Wally, designed by Andres Saita (Dionysus) and fabricated by Ironbark Metal Design, an eye-catching addition to City Walk next to the Petrie Plaza merry-go-round. This larger-than-life sculpture depicts the ACT floral emblem the Royal Bluebell known scientifically as wahlenbergia gloriosa from where it gets its playful name. This perfect companion to the public art trail and Floriade is an opportunity for even long-term Canberra residents to discover something new.

Moving away from the city centre, artsACT has also published a Tuggeranong Public Art guide, which includes a version for even the youngest of budding artists. Both versions feature the stunning Japanese Granite Dream Lens for the Future by Oushi Zokei, carved from a single piece of stone. The work was relocated to the Lake Tuggeranong foreshore earlier this year and is best viewed in the early morning light.

Pick up your copy of the Canberra City Public Art Walking Trail map from the Visitor’s Information Centre or find it alongside the Tuggeranong Trail online at www.arts.act.gov.au/public-art.

– Statement ends –

Michael Pettersson, MLA | Media Releases

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