Atlassian co-founder and renewable energy investor Mike Cannon-Brookes is backing a plan to revitalise the economy post-pandemic, and create 1 million jobs, through investment in green projects and renewable energy.
Spearheaded by climate change think tank Beyond Zero Emissions, The Million Jobs Plan is focused on research, community engagement and collaboration with business and industry to boost the economy in an environmentally sustainable way.
Speaking at the planโs launch event yesterday, Beyond Zero Emissions chair and interim chief Eytan Lenko said Australia is โat a crossroadsโ.
Some 85,000 jobs have been lost since March, because of the COVID-19 pandemic, he noted, and billions of dollars will have to be invested in order to get the economy back on track.
โThe principle of an effective stimulus is that it should create jobs, obviously,โ he said. โBut thatโs best done by accelerating a trend.โ
The plan focuses on bringing forward spending that has already happened, Lenko noted.
โWe should do that by encouraging private investment.โ
The interim chief also pointed to a โmegatrendโ towards digitisation, which has only been exacerbated by COVID-19.
In an energy context, that move has been from inefficient โanalogueโ energy technologies, towards cleaner โdigitalโ renewable energy solutions.
Currently, renewable energy is also the cheapest form of energy, and itโs only dropping in cost.
โThis makes any economic plan that doesnโt rely on that fact uninvestable, at least through private investment,โ Lenko said.
โWeโve got a once-in-a-generation opportunity to rebuild Australiaโs economy and set ourselves up for the next 50 years of growth.โ
Speaking on a panel at the launch, Cannon-Brookes asked: โHow do we get a future thatโs better for our economy and better for our country?โ
The answer lies partly in focusing on our assets, that is, the natural advantages of Australiaโs sun and wind, and also Australians themselves.
Where his own investment activities come into play is in proving that new technologies can work, or that existing technologies can be deployed in ways they never have been before.
โThereโs a huge momentum towards โif itโs not been done before, weโre not convinced it can be doneโ,โ he said.
โWeโre slightly more risky capital,โ he added. โWeโre looking to show people โฆ that it is possible to do.โ
The big vision is to prove that Australia can export energy in a new way that is more economically viable.
โWeโve exported energy for a long time, just in the wrong form,โ he explained. โThey happen to be non-economic forms to export energy, too.โ
Both Cannon-Brookes and Deanne Stewart, chief executive of First State Super, also noted that government policy could be holding back private investment in renewable energy and tech projects.
โNow is time to get really clear policy that allows players like business and super funds to really deploy their capital and really back the future with much less risk at hand,โ Steward said on the panel.
โAt the moment thereโs a lot of risk out there without a really clear path and policy.โ
Cannon-Brookes agreed, suggesting thereโs a lot of risk and uncertainty in long-term policies that could be removed.
โThat would certainly increase greatly the amount of investment in future forward technologies and projects that deploy existing technologies in future forward ways,โ he said.
Australia could also do with a longer-term goal, he suggested, calling the governmentโs Technology Roadmap a โstrategy without a destinationโ.
And, itโs not necessarily all about invention, he noted.
โItโs not about inventing new technologies,โ he said. โItโs about deploying the technologies we already have today at scale, to generate jobs and economic prosperity for Australia.โ
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