US Economy, Interest Rates, Petrol Prices
April 19, 2001CPI Figures, Shell/Woodside, Fuel Sales Grant Scheme, Beer, Peter Nugent, Budget
April 24, 2001Transcript No. 2001/043
Transcript
of
Hon Peter Costello MP
Treasurer
Interview with Howard Sattler, 2SM
Tuesday, 24 April 2001
9.25 am
E&OE
SUBJECTS: Shell/Woodside, Peter Nugent
SATTLER:
Are you there Treasurer?
TREASURER:
Good morning, how are you Howard?
SATTLER:
Okay, well this is a big, is this the biggest decision you have had to make
while you have been Treasurer?
TREASURER:
One of the toughest decisions I have had to make. It was something that we
had submissions from all of the parties. It was, there were arguments both
ways and I had to make the decision in the end and I knew that people would
disagree with the decision whichever way I went. So, it was a tough decision.
SATTLER:
Yes, but how does it sit with your advocacy of globalisation. You are an advocate
of that arent you, you and the Prime Minister?
TREASURER:
Well, I am in favour of foreign investment which develops Australia and creates
economic growth and jobs.
SATTLER:
Wouldnt this have done that?
TREASURER:
Well, when you are looking at the North West Shelf you are dealing with Australias
largest energy resource and Shell Australia already has an interest in it,
as do some other foreign companies, but the question here was the manager and
operator and marketer. And the manager, operator, and marketer is Woodside,
and the question was whether we should approve Shell getting majority of shares
in the operator and manager. Now, I think it is in Australias national interest
for that resource to be developed to its full potential, for the LNG exports
coming out of the North West Shelf to be pushed for sale in foreign markets
in preference to LNG from any other field in the world.
SATTLER:
But you have almost indicated that you did not either trust Shell or did not
have the absolute water tight guarantee that they would promote North West
Shelf gas ahead of all others. You have virtually said that havent you?
TREASURER:
What I have…
SATTLER:
Because of their other competing interests?
TREASURER:
What I had to do, is I had to decide where the national interest of Australia
lay. And I think the national interest of Australia lay in keeping an arrangement
where you have got an independent operator, manager and marketer, and the reason
I think that is that this is such an important resource for Australia. The
export earnings of this project dwarf nearly all our other export industries,
and we very much need that to be developed to its full capacity and when people
are selling LNG up in China or Japan, I want Australian LNG to be put first.
SATTLER:
Now, why wouldnt Shell do that if 76 per cent of all the resources of natural
gas that they are involved with are in the North West of Western Australia?
TREASURER:
I am not casting any aspersions on Shell. Shell has been an investor in Australia
for 100 years, but, Howard I was faced with the decision, do I think the national
interest would be defended if you changed the current arrangements? I thought
that the current arrangements, where you do have the independent operator,
manager and marketer ensure that that resource is being developed to its maximum
and I have to make sure that it is.
SATTLER:
You keep talking about the national interest but what about the Liberal Partys
interests in retaining seats in Western Australia, because that is what some
of the members over there were telling you. They said if you do this, if you
let them buy this up, we will lose seats?
TREASURER:
No, the only thing…
SATTLER:
Well, they did say that to you, I know they did.
TREASURER:
Well, nobody put anything to me in those terms at all. I had thousands of people
putting views to me. Members of the public, Members of Parliament, Shell, Woodside,
the other joint venturers, BP, BHP, everbodys putting views, but at the end
of the day the law is that these bids have to be tested against the national
interest and that is the only thing that I can have regard to. And that is,
I obey the law and that is what I did.
SATTLER:
Would you entertain another bid by Shell?
TREASURER:
If Shell were to put forward another proposal it will be considered on its
merits. Yes it will.
SATTLER:
You havent shut the door on it?
TREASURER:
I am required to make a decision on a particular proposal, I made a decision
on this proposal, anybody is entitled to make a new application. It will be
considered on its merits.
SATTLER:
Would you like to see BHP become a suitor for Woodside? You know, the big Australian?
TREASURER:
If BHP wants to put up a proposal that would be considered on its merits, but
I am not sitting there re-designing the company arrangements on the North West
Shelf. That is not my job. The only job I have in this is where there is a
foreign action I have to look at the national interest and when I looked at
it on this specific proposal, and Howard, these are the most complicated things
imaginable, they are really complicated…
SATTLER:
I am appreciating that…
TREASURER:
…the legal, the corporate structures, the submissions, and all you can do
is just focus on the deal thats in front of you. It took me hours, days, weeks,
to go through all of that and at the end of the day someone had to make the
decision, Howard, and it was me and that is the decision I have made, for better
or for worse. I think it is the right decision.
SATTLER:
And do you want Shell to stay in Australia?
TREASURER:
Yes, we very much want Shell to stay in Australia. And Shell today owns what
Shell yesterday owned which is one-sixth of the North West Shelf, nothing has
happened, Shell hasnt lost any of the interest that it had. This is a question
as to what would happen to the share structure of the operator and manager.
SATTLER:
Pauline Hanson has told me on the programme this morning she thinks we should
not allow any foreign takeovers here until the Australian dollar is worth the
equivalent 60 cents to the US dollar. What do you think of that?
TREASURER:
I think she is probably just engaging in opportunism.
SATTLER:
It is a victory for her politics today, isnt it?
TREASURER:
Rubbish. Pauline Hanson had (inaudible) this decision, and the truth of the
matter is at the end of the day foreign investment is a good thing for Australia.
If we had not have had foreign investment then we most probably would not have
developed the North West Shelf in the way we have. This is a question as to
who was going to manage and operate that resource and I took a decision on
that and I was obliged to do so in the national interest.
SATTLER:
Okay, just before you go, totally unrelated. I know you want to pay a tribute.
You have lost a good political colleague and a friend today.
TREASURER:
Yes…
SATTLER:
Peter Nugent.
TREASURER:
Yes, this morning, one of my colleagues, Peter Nugent, the Member for the federal
electorate of Aston in Melbourne, suffered a massive heart attack and
died. It is a terrible loss. He was a friend of mine. We had come into the
Parliament together in 1990. My heart goes out to his widow, Carol, and his
family and he will be sorely missed by all of his colleagues.
SATTLER:
I do appreciate your time today. I know it is a down day for that reason alone.
Thank you very much for joining us.
TREASURER:
Thanks very much.
SATTLER:
Good.