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Home»News»News live: Jane Hume says Australia should be ‘encouraging’ datacentres and claims PM’s plan to regulate AI may stifle innovation | Australia news
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News live: Jane Hume says Australia should be ‘encouraging’ datacentres and claims PM’s plan to regulate AI may stifle innovation | Australia news

channel1la.comBy channel1la.comJuly 15, 2026No Comments
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News live: Jane Hume says Australia should be ‘encouraging’ datacentres and claims PM’s plan to regulate AI may stifle innovation | Australia news
Jane Hume. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP
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Hume concerned Labor will stifle innovation with new AI office

Deputy opposition leader Jane Hume spoke earlier about the news that Australia will create an AI office to fast-track datacentres and encourage approvals for AI projects.

Hume told Sky News of the plans, to be detailed in a speech by Anthony Albanese today:

double quotation markWe’ve seen our standard of living go backwards so far and so fast under Labor. I can understand why they are reaching out towards this new technology and trying to control its direction.

However, my concern is more about whether Labor stifles that innovation that comes with AI, rather than allowing it to flourish.

Hume said she understands that datacentres don’t come “without their problems”, but we should be “encouraging it where it is appropriate and where possible, because it will power the productivity boom of the future”.

Deputy opposition leader Jane Hume. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP
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Updated at 01.35 BST

Key events

Tasmanian government could buy James Boag’s brewery, premier says

James Boag’s brewery could be bought by a state government after time is called on its beer production, AAP reports.

Parent company Lion in June announced it would shut the brewery in Launceston in northern Tasmania, first opened in 1881, in November.

Tasmanian premier Jeremy Rockliff has met with beverage company Kirin, which owns Lion, and said they had agreed to provide in-principle support to explore the state’s proposal to buy the site.

“The Boag’s site is part of Tasmania’s industrial and cultural heritage,” Rockliff said on Wednesday.

James Boag’s brewery in Launceston. Photograph: Ethan James/AAP

A union campaign to convince Lion to sell the brewery to another beer maker has collected more than 3,500 signatures but hasn’t shifted the company’s decision to wind-up production.

The closure will leave about 40 workers without jobs. The government hasn’t provided any details on what it would cost to buy the site, or what it could be used for in the future.

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Updated at 02.08 BST

Caitlin Cassidy

Caitlin Cassidy

Vice-chancellors to front antisemitism royal commission as university block enters third day

A former Flinders University student has told the antisemitism royal commission he has been painted in a “political light” because he is Jewish and a supporter of Israel which has limited access to spaces and safety.

The co-president of the Australasian Union of Jewish Students (AUJS) in South Australia, appearing as Mika, pointed to one student representative council meeting in 2022 when a student said “death to Israel” and “death to Australia” which he said caused a fellow peer to have a panic attack, and another instance when a student was called a “dirty Zionist”.

double quotation markThe term Israel, I experienced as a collective term for Jewish people … Not to mention it’s where half of the world’s Jewish population lives … For Israelis, there’s a sense of xenophobia, asking ‘where are you really from? You better not take over us’ … These assumptions have limited our access to spaces. There’s this sense that the bar of entry to a club space, for example, requires a political admission.

The antisemitism and social cohesion royal commission has entered its third day of hearings examining the university sector. Also appearing on Wednesday are the vice-chancellors of the University of Melbourne, the University of Sydney and UNSW.

Mika said since the 7 October 2023 Hamas terror attack, he noted a rise in “anti-Israel” sentiment and a “hostility” towards Israel which was projected on to Jewish students regardless of citizenship.

Flinders University. Photograph: Tracey Nearmy/The Guardian
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Updated at 02.14 BST

Swimmer Shayna Jack to retire after Commonwealth Games

Australian swimmer Shayna Jack has announced she will retire after the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow.

In a video posted on Instagram in which Jack spoke with her coach Dean Boxall, the freestyler fought back tears as she said the Games – to be held from 23 July to 2 August – would be her competitive swan song.

“It’s been an absolute privilege being an Australian athlete, an Australian swimmer, an Olympic medallist, Commonwealth Games medallist, world medallist, and world record-holder,” the 27-year-old said.

double quotation markI think I’ve definitely ticked off all the boxes. It’s been a long career, but I’m ready to announce my retirement and be Shayna Jack.

Shayna Jack swims with the Australia team in 2024. Photograph: Manan Vatsyayana/AFP/Getty Images
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Updated at 01.31 BST

Hume concerned Labor will stifle innovation with new AI office

Deputy opposition leader Jane Hume spoke earlier about the news that Australia will create an AI office to fast-track datacentres and encourage approvals for AI projects.

Hume told Sky News of the plans, to be detailed in a speech by Anthony Albanese today:

double quotation markWe’ve seen our standard of living go backwards so far and so fast under Labor. I can understand why they are reaching out towards this new technology and trying to control its direction.

However, my concern is more about whether Labor stifles that innovation that comes with AI, rather than allowing it to flourish.

Hume said she understands that datacentres don’t come “without their problems”, but we should be “encouraging it where it is appropriate and where possible, because it will power the productivity boom of the future”.

Deputy opposition leader Jane Hume. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP
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Updated at 01.35 BST

Alcoa to set up gallium plant in Western Australia

Alcoa Corp said on Tuesday it has reached a final ⁠investment decision to set up a gallium plant at its Wagerup alumina refinery ⁠in Western Australia, ⁠with backing from the Australian, Japanese and United States governments and industry partners. The US and Australian ⁠governments had said in October they would support Alcoa’s expansion plans in the region, ⁠a few months after the company signed a joint development agreement with a venture ‌between the Japanese ‌government and Sojitz Corp.

Reuters reports the US-based aluminium producer ‌plans to construct and operate the plant, which could provide up to 10% of the global gallium supply.

“This final investment decision reflects a shared commitment by governments and industry to strengthen critical mineral supply chains ‌among the partners,” said Alcoa president and CEO William F. Oplinger.

Construction activities are expected to begin after final site preparations, the company added.

Gallium, a raw material used in the production of alumina, is a critical mineral for the technology ⁠sector, especially the semiconductor and defence industries.

Earlier this month, Alcoa agreed to buy the bulk of South32’s aluminium portfolio for an implied ‌enterprise value of up to $5.6bn to expand its access to upstream assets, including bauxite, alumina and aluminium assets across Brazil, South Africa and Western Australia.

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Updated at 01.07 BST

Graham Readfearn

Graham Readfearn

Coalition and One Nation’s plan to ditch net zero would not lower power prices, CSIRO report finds

Claims by the Coalition and One Nation that abandoning a net zero climate target would bring down power prices are contradicted in a new CSIRO report on the costs of generating electricity.

Generation costs will probably rise after 2030 regardless of Australia’s policy on net zero, according to the CSIRO’s annual GenCost report, but prices should then stabilise at levels below recent price spikes.

The report concludes electricity from nuclear plants, which the Coalition and One Nation promote, would be the most expensive way to generate electricity among the current options.

Read more here:

Transmission lines in Queensland. Photograph: Krystle Wright/The Guardian
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Dan Jervis-Bardy

Dan Jervis-Bardy

Taylor takes harsher tone towards One Nation

Angus Taylor has adopted a more confrontational approach to One Nation in the past week or so after previously shying away from opportunities to openly criticise Pauline Hanson and her rightwing populist agenda.

The opposition leader’s reluctance created a sharp contrast with colleagues such as Andrew Hastie, who has gone as far as declaring political war on One Nation.

Taylor’s stance shifted in a major speech last week, when he warned that a One Nation government would bring an “eternity of pain” to Australia.

He told 2GB radio on Tuesday morning that he made those criticisms with a “heavy heart”, showing he remains sensitive to alienating conservative voters who have shifted to One Nation.

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Updated at 00.32 BST

Taylor rules out power-sharing deal with One Nation

Dan Jervis-Bardy

Dan Jervis-Bardy

The opposition leader, Angus Taylor, says he won’t do a deal with Pauline Hanson to form government in his latest attempt to distance the Coalition from One Nation.

Appearing on ABC’s 7.30 program on Tuesday night, Taylor was asked repeatedly to explicitly rule out a potential power-sharing deal with One Nation after the next federal election. He said:

double quotation markWe’ve got absolutely no plan for a deal with One Nation to form government. We want to form government in our own right, in our coalition, the Liberal and National Party coalition, on the back of a strong plan and a strong team.

7.30 host Sarah Ferguson said not planning to do something was not the same as ruling it out, pushing Taylor for an iron-clad guarantee. Taylor said:

double quotation markI’m ruling it out, there is no plan.

Opposition leader Angus Taylor. Photograph: Dan Himbrechts/AAP
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Updated at 00.17 BST

Man found dead in car after shooting in north-western Sydney

A man was killed in a public place shooting in Sydney this morning, NSW police say.

Officials said emergency services were called to Carlingford, in Sydney’s north-west, around 7am. On arrival, they found a man, aged in his 30s, with significant injuries inside a car.

He was unable to be revived and died at the scene. The man has not been identified.

Police have established a crime scene and closed the area to the public. An investigation is ongoing.

NSW police crime scene. Photograph: Steven Saphore/AAP
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Updated at 00.19 BST

University vice-chancellors to be grilled at royal commission on antisemitism

University vice-chancellors will appear before the royal commission on antisemitism, as representatives from Australia’s highest ranked institution prepare to be the first to give evidence, AAP reports.

The University of Melbourne’s Glyn Davis, who is interim vice-chancellor, will appear at the royal commission’s public hearing on Wednesday.

Davis’s attendance will follow the damning testimony a day prior given by Jewish academic Steven Prawer, whose campus office was broken into and occupied by protesters in 2024.

“We reaffirm our commitment to a safe, inclusive and supportive environment for all and acknowledge the important work of the Royal Commission,” a statement from the University of Melbourne’s reads.

double quotation markAs a diverse university community, we must come together and stand united in our continued efforts to eradicate hate and discrimination in all forms.

The University of Melbourne. Photograph: Maria Petrova Now/Alamy
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Updated at 00.19 BST

Shorten labels rising anti-immigrant rhetoric a form of ‘political dementia’

Shorten said he believes there is a “creeping cultural dementia” taking place in Australian politics amid debates over multi- and monoculturalism.

The former Labor leader had this to say to RN:

double quotation markI do detect – I’ve read this expression somewhere, but I’ll apply it here – a sort of creeping cultural dementia across Australian political discourse, where we’re forgetting some of the basic memory of what makes this country such a special place … Saying that we should go to zero immigration, it forgets how we got here.

Like again, to be really straight talking, I could understand why perhaps some Aboriginal Australians might say, well, immigration hasn’t been a success. But you know what? The other 97% of us, we all came from somewhere else.

He went on:

double quotation markWe’ve got to stop this sort of rush to extremism, which extinguishes sort of the country’s history, which is a successful story of bringing things in. …

When I see people proposing very simplistic solutions and trying to put everything to a binary … that intolerance I think is a form of political dementia where we’re just shutting down our ability to think.

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Updated at 00.05 BST

Australia Claims datacentres encouraging Hume Innovation Jane live News Plan PMs regulate stifle
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