Australia election 2025 live: Littleproud says Coalition to ‘impose a charge’ on gas exports until domestic needs are met; Dutton vows to cut international students

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Littleproud says Coalition to ‘impose a charge’ on gas exports until domestic needs met

The Nationals leader is being asked about the Coalition’s gas plan, announced during the opposition leader’s budget-in-reply speech, and confusion about how it’ll work.

Littleproud said:

In effect, there’s about 1200 petajoules that are foundation contracts that we’re not going to touch. We have to maintain our international relationships. What we’re also having, our domestic grid at the moment, is around 500 petajoules that comes from the domestic grid, but there’s 300 petajoules that Anthony Albanese [allows to be exported], rather than keeping for Australians … we’re saying about 50 to 100 petajoules of that should come into the domestic market.

Littleproud said he was also going to work to get more gas into the system from the Gippsland region in Victoria.

That will then mean that it’ll give confidence for gas companies to continue to drill and to get gas into our grid but continue to export, because that also helps us.

A village in Gippsland. Photograph: BeyondImages/Getty Images

On the mechanism by which the gas reservation will be enforced, which has been one of the major questions relating to the Coalition’s policy, Littleproud said the Coalition would be “imposing a charge” on exports until a certain amount of gas – a peak amount of around 550 to 600 petajoules – was in the domestic grid.

But on what that charge will be, Littleproud said that was still to be announced.

The Nationals leader has been asked why there are so many details in the Coalition’s policies that have not been announced.

“Not too many people have been engaged,” he said.

We’re going to announce our policies when it’s right and we get the best bang for buck on this.

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Henry Belot

Henry Belot

Greens say free early childhood education a priority in any minority government

The federal Greens have named access to free, universal early childhood education as one of their priority policies in the event of a minority government.

The party has proposed treating early childhood like public schools. It would push for every child to have access to 50 hours of free education and care a week. It would also extend universal access to pre-school to 30 hours a week for all four and three-year olds.

The policy would cost an estimated $29bn over four years.

Greens leader Adam Bandt will launch the policy alongside the party’s candidate for Macnamara, Sonya Semmens, and Senator Steph Hodgins-May later today.

Here’s Bandt:

In a wealthy country like ours everyone should be able to afford childcare, but too many families are struggling with the cost.

What Labor’s doing isn’t working, and Peter Dutton would take childcare backwards.

Experts predict we’re heading for a minority Parliament, where the Greens will keep Dutton out and push Labor to treat early childhood education like school, where it should be free to go with quality guaranteed.

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