Home EsporteAustralia news live: David Pocock asks why Future Fund boss sent staffer on $20,000 US trip to assess hotels | Australia news

Australia news live: David Pocock asks why Future Fund boss sent staffer on $20,000 US trip to assess hotels | Australia news

by deous

Future Fund sends staffer on a $20,000 hotel scoping trip, estimates reveals

Krishani Dhanji

Krishani Dhanji

The Future Fund CEO has revealed that his former executive assistant went on a scoping trip to the US “to assess hotels as to their suitability for our staff” and negotiate the rates of hotels “to get better deals” – at the cost of $20,000.

At Senate estimates last night, Future Fund CEO, Raphael Arndt, revealed the travel, saying the rates negotiation have saved the fund around $30,000 annually.

Senator David Pocock asked why the Fund couldn’t have negotiated the rates via phone or a Zoom call instead:

Does the Future Fund really need someone to go ahead and check out hotels? What was there a report done from that? Or what was she checking the firmness of beds? I’m serious, like, that seems like something that you know the prime minister would have, and you’d hope he had, but the Future Fund?

Future Fund CEO Raphael Arndt
The Future Fund CEO, Raphael Arndt. Photograph: Mike Bowers/The Guardian

Arndt also revealed he’d attended a lunch at the highly exclusive Disney Club 33, founded by Walt Disney, where membership is by invitation only, and reportedly costs tens of thousands of dollars.

Arndt said he went to the exclusive club to learn about its training programs. He took on notice whether that lunch was paid for by taxpayers or by Disney.

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Donna Lu

Donna Lu

Victoria may struggle to meet key renewable energy targets

Victoria may fail to meet future targets in the shift to renewable energy unless some projects are fast-tracked, according to an auditor general report.

The report, tabled in state parliament today, finds Victoria is on track to meet its renewable energy target in 2025, but meeting future targets “will be more difficult”.

The state will fail to meet its 2032 offshore wind energy target, and still has no port to support wind turbine assembly and construction.

Photograph: Tom Little/Reuters

While the state has enough energy supply to meet its needs out to 2030, the report found there was “little buffer” in Victoria’s electricity generation and storage pipeline in the period after the planned closure of the Yallourn coal-fired power station in mid-2028:

Victoria could face electricity shortfalls to meet peak demand … which could result in load shedding (planned electricity reduction to selected areas) and blackouts.

Greens spokesperson for the energy transition, Tim Read, said no wind generation projects had reached financial close during this term of parliament and several projects had been bogged down in lengthy planning approval processes. He said:

When we miss renewable energy targets, it’s about more than just not hitting our numbers. It’s about failing to address the climate emergency, and we can’t forget that.

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