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AFCA welcomes fuel excise cut but infrastructure is more important

The Federal Budget’s commitment to skills and training for small business owners, and the cut to the fuel excise by 22/litre, have been welcomed by the Australian Forest Contractors Association. Source: Timberbiz

AFCA general manager Carlie Porteous said the fuel excise cut was welcomed as short-term relief for many in the wood product supply chain, which at the end of the day means better prices for the Australian consumer.

“However, real efficiencies in freight movement and fuel usage can be realised by investing in roading infrastructure that can cater for increased capacity such as High Productivity Freight Vehicles and local roads that can cater for B-double combinations over single,” she said.

“This means permitting, regulation and funding allocation needs to be agreed upon strategically, at local, state and federal government levels.”

Ms Porteous said regional roads and infrastructure upgrades did not appear to have been included in the Budget’s regional Infrastructure package as a way of relieving wood products supply chain issues.

“These efficiencies will lead to at least a 24% efficiency increase in tonnes per trip (ie 9 axle B-double to 11 axle A Double1).

Additional funding ($3.7b) is also being provided to work with states and territories, to agree on a new National Skills Agreement under the Heads of Agreement for Skills Reform to invest in the skills system to support economic growth and resilience.

This collegiate approach to identifying skills already exists (ie. Skills Impact Australia/Forest Works).

“It is unclear what a new department will bring to the industry and whether it is the solution to the skills gaps in the industry,” Ms Porteous said.

Small Business owners (with a turnover of less than $50 million) will be entitled and encouraged to increase spending on external training courses to the tune of $550m (deductions). Training needs to be delivered by an Australian registered entity, within Australia or online.

For every $100 a small business spends on training employees, they will get a $120 tax deduction, helping them become more productive and competitive.

“The Forest Contracting Businesses within Australia are already highly committed to skills development of their workers. Getting some tax relief for continuing this focus is a great initiative,” Ms Porteous said.

“However, what we are seeing, and what we have seen over the past 20 years, is a failure to appropriately resource these Australian registered entities – there is a bottleneck and it’s not the industry,” she said.

“The availability of qualified trainers and assessors is known broadly as the main skills shortage in Australia. This is where the funding needs to go.”