House debates

Wednesday, 18 June 2008

Committees

Public Works Committee; Reference

9:55 am

Photo of Mike KellyMike Kelly (Eden-Monaro, Australian Labor Party, Parliamentary Secretary for Defence Support) Share this | | Hansard source

I move:

That, in accordance with the provisions of the Public Works Committee Act 1969, the following proposed work be referred to the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Public Works for consideration and report: Australian SKA Pathfinder radio telescope in Geraldton-Greenough and in Murchison Shire, Western Australia.

The Australian government has provided funding to CSIRO for the design, construction and operation of the Australian Square Kilometre Array PathfinderASKAP—radio telescope. ASKAP will be the fastest survey radio telescope in the world. The ASKAP telescope will deliver world-leading performance in applications including cosmology, understanding transient phenomena in the universe and obtaining a deep understanding of the galaxy in which we live. It is proposed that ASKAP will be constructed on the Murchison Radio-Astronomy Observatory in the mid-west of Western Australia, a site identified internationally as one of the world’s best sites for radioastronomy.

The ASKAP telescope has confirmed Common-wealth funding of $111 million. In addition to the Commonwealth funding, the Western Australian government has allocated $4.08 million to support the radioastronomy projects in the mid-west of Western Australia. The Australian government, in collaboration with the government of Western Australia, has determined that CSIRO’s construction and operation of ASKAP is an essential component of Australia’s positioning to host the international Square Kilometre Array, or SKA, radio telescope project. The SKA is a proposed $1.8 billion international project under development by scientists from 50 institutions across 19 countries, including Australia, New Zealand and other countries across Europe, Asia, Africa and the Americas. The SKA will be one of the largest scientific projects ever undertaken anywhere in the world.

In 2005, in response to a call for proposals by the International SKA Steering Committee, Australia, Argentina, China and South Africa submitted proposals to host the SKA. In September 2006, Australia and South Africa were shortlisted as being acceptable sites. A final decision on the site of the full SKA is expected in 2011-12. Construction of the antennas and infrastructure for the ASKAP needs to commence in mid-2009 in order to meet project milestones to influence SKA technology and site selection decisions and to maintain Australia’s current world-leading position in radioastronomy. I commend the motion to the House.

Question agreed to.