Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
ABC News
ABC News
Business

Billion-dollar infrastructure budget blowout highlights impact of labour, supplies shortages

The WA government has blamed the shortage of skills and labour for some big project delays. (ABC Licensed: Elise Pianegonda)

The WA Government will spend almost $1 billion, and possibly more, to deal with cost blowouts and delays on its infrastructure projects over the next few years.

While there has been plenty of attention on the rapidly rising costs and shortages of labour and supplies to build new homes in Perth, the WA budget handed down on Thursday laid bare how badly these problems in the construction market are hurting the state's own projects.

For example, the WA Government will inject almost $380 million over the next three years to deal with cost escalations and supply chain problems in its signature rail infrastructure program Metronet.

This money will go towards the new Thornlie-Cockburn rail line and the extension of the Joondalup line to Yanchep.

The budget papers also stated the rail line to Perth Airport, slated to be finished by the end of 2020, would now open sometime this year.

Blowouts recorded across the state

Some of the biggest cost blowouts are in the regions, especially in the mid west where the labour market is particularly stretched and hundreds of residents affected by Cyclone Seroja are waiting for work to be done on their homes and businesses.

Rebuilding is continuing in Kalbarri after Cyclone Seroja damaged most buildings in the town. (ABC Midwest and Wheatbelt: Samille Mitchell)

The Geraldton regional hospital expansion has blown out by $50 million, bringing its total cost to more than $122 million.

Cost blowouts and delays have hurt the delivery of mental health facilities in Karratha and Broome, with the two step-up, step-down facilities set to cost a combined $3.9 million extra.

An impression of the Geraldton Health Campus exterior once the redevelopment is complete. (ABC Midwest and Wheatbelt: Francesca Mann)

The WA Government will put an extra $80 million towards the Bunbury Outer Ring road, pushing its cost to $1.25 billion, to deliver a scaled-back version of the south west's biggest road project.

The budget also revealed the $250 million Pinjarra bypass road will take a back seat, with no significant work until 2025.

Construction is already underway on the Bunbury Outer Ring road. (ABC South West: Sam Bold)

Some key tourism projects – such as a new café and function centre at Perth Zoo, as well upgraded water infrastructure on Rottnest Island – will get multi-million dollar cash injections to deal with increased construction costs.

$350m set aside, just in case

The WA Government has also planned for construction cost blowouts in other areas of spending, including:

  • $17.1 million for health developments over the next three years
  • $13 million over the five years from 2021-22 for education projects
  • Almost $30 million on training-relating builds

But the budget also revealed the WA Government has set aside $350 million just in case there are further blowouts of construction costs.

As the budget papers outline, there are many reasons for the "cost escalation and supply chain constraints" which are dramatically affecting its big infrastructure projects.

These include:

  • Measures by governments to stimulate the economy during the COVID-19 pandemic
  • Supply chain problems caused by factors including the closure of the Trans-Australian railway line earlier this year, workplace absences due to COVID-19 in other states and pandemic-related logistical issues
  • Rising costs in building materials, which have been affected by the Russian invasion of Ukraine and increased freight costs
  • A shortage of skilled workers, partly because of border closures

These problems appear to be affecting all parts of the economy, with the budget papers showing business investment only grew by 4.75 per cent, compared with a predicted 9.75 per cent, in 2021-22.

The rail line to Perth Airport, which was slated to be finished by the end of 2020, will now open some time this year, according to the budget papers. (Supplied: WA Government)

"Labour shortages and supply chain disruptions have resulted in some delays to investment spending, particularly for smaller non-mining businesses," the budget papers said.

This budget was finalised on April 11, weeks before the latest Australian Bureau of Statistics figures showed Perth had the highest inflation in the country at 7.6 per cent in the first quarter of this year.

While WA Treasury uses a different way of calculating inflation for its projections, the budget showed a 4 per cent growth in 2021-22, after five years of only growing an average of 1 per cent.

"Price pressures have accelerated in recent months, due to high global oil prices and supply chain disruptions from Omicron outbreaks (particularly in New South Wales and Victoria), as well as adverse weather events, such as flooding that caused the temporary closure of the east-west rail route between 21 January and 15 February 2022," the budget paper said.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.