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As it happened: Australia-US nuclear submarine deal to counter China, NSW records 1351 new COVID cases, Victoria records 514

Josh Dye and Michaela Whitbourn
Updated ,first published

The day in review

By Michaela Whitbourn

Good evening and thank you for reading our live coverage of the day’s events. If you are just joining us now, here’s what you need you know:

  • Australia will acquire its first fleet of nuclear-powered submarines as part of a historic defence pact with the US and the UK, aimed at countering China’s growing influence in the Indo-Pacific. The new AUKUS alliance, announced today and described by Mr Morrison as a “forever partnership”, is regarded as Australia’s most significant strategic move in decades, and brings with it risks and rewards.
  • Just how big a deal is this? Political editor Peter Hartcher writes that China already has 66 submarines and is expected to have 10 more by 2030, six of which are nuclear powered, according to the US Office of Naval Intelligence. By that date, Hartcher says, Australia will still only have the same six Collins class diesel powered subs that were first commissioned by the Hawke government, if they are still functional. Their retirement has been postponed repeatedly by successive governments, Labor and Liberal.
  • Federal Opposition leader Anthony Albanese said “the proposal is that the new submarines would not be in the water until 2040”. But chief political correspondent David Crowe writes that the government will consider whether the first vessels could be built overseas (instead of Adelaide) in order to deploy some of the fleet as soon as possible in the 2030s.
Scott Morrison, Joe Biden and Boris Johnson launched the AUKUS alliance on Thursday morning.
  • China has slammed the alliance. “The US, UK and Australia are engaging in cooperation in nuclear-powered submarines that gravely undermines regional peace and stability, aggravates the arms race and hurts the international non-proliferation efforts,” Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian said at a press briefing in Beijing late on Thursday.
  • The pact will result in Australia tearing up a controversial $90 billion deal with French submarine maker Naval Group that the Turnbull government struck in 2016. While Mr Morrison insisted “France remains an incredibly important partner in the Pacific”, Europe correspondent Bevan Shields writes that the fallout is likely to be considerable. Mr Albanese took aim at the government for wasting billions, saying “we know there are contracts in place already that will be breached, and we know there will be substantial compensation costs payable.”
Prime Minister Scott Morrison at this morning’s joint press conference with US President Joe Biden and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson.AAP

Melbourne level crossing worker tests positive ahead of construction crackdown

By Cassandra Morgan and Michael Fowler

Work has stopped on a level crossing removal project in Melbourne’s north east after a worker tested positive for COVID-19.

The worker did a 12-hour overnight shift at the Maroondah Highway in Lilydale from 6pm on Sunday but, after they developed symptoms on Monday, they did not return to the site.

A level crossing removal worker has tested positive for COVID-19. Eddie Jim

The worker tested positive for coronavirus on Wednesday, leading the project to come to a halt while deep cleaning and contact tracing is underway.

A Level Crossing Removal Project spokeswoman said it was working closely with the Department of Health to ensure the safety of its workforce.

COVID-19 detected in wastewater in regional Victoria

By Cassandra Morgan

Victorian health authorities have warned of COVID-19 sewage detections in the regional cities of Ballarat and Wangaratta, and in the Latrobe Valley in the state’s east.

The Chief Health Officer’s update, issued on Thursday evening, said there had been “repeated unexpected detections” in Ballarat East between Sunday, September 12 and Wednesday, September 15.

Ballarat residents began their first day of a week-long snap lockdown on Thursday.Penny Stephens

The unexpected detections in that area were in suburbs including Ballarat East, Ballarat North, Bakery Hill, Black Hill, Brown Hill, Buninyong, Canadian, Eureka, Golden Point, Mt Clear, Mt Helen, Invermay Park, Wendouree, Lake Wendouree, and Warrenheip.

Ballarat residents began their first day of a week-long snap lockdown on Thursday as the number of positive cases in the city of about 100,000 climbed to six.

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China slams Australia’s defence pact with US and UK

By Chris Barrett

Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian has slammed Australia’s new defence pact with the US and the UK at a press briefing in Beijing late on Thursday.

He described the AUKUS alliance, which includes an agreement for Australia to acquire a fleet of nuclear-powered submarines using technology shared by the US and the UK, as extremely irresponsible and said it would intensify the arms race in the region.

“The US, UK and Australia are engaging in cooperation in nuclear-powered submarines that gravely undermines regional peace and stability, aggravates the arms race and hurts the international non-proliferation efforts,” he said.

“Australia is a non-nuclear weapon state party to the NPT [non-proliferation treaty] and a party to the nuclear weapon-free zone in the Southern Pacific.

Has 70 per cent of the eligible population of Australia and Victoria received their first dose?

By Craig Butt

The daily vaccine numbers arrived from the health department a bit later than usual today, but the updated data is now up in our vaccine tracker dashboard.

The progress bars at the top of this blog have updated as well (although you may need to refresh the page for the changes to appear).

The data shows that nationwide 69.8 per cent of those aged 16 and above have received their first vaccine dose, and that in Victoria 69.3 per cent of those aged 16 and above have received their first dose.

This might, at first glance, seem to contradict what Prime Minister Scott Morrison said this morning: “Today we will hit 70 per cent of the country aged over 16 who have had their first dose.”

What Melbourne’s public transport blackout will look like on Saturday

By Cassandra Morgan

Victoria’s Department of Transport has released maps of what Melbourne’s public transport blackout will look like on Saturday as authorities move to thwart an anti-lockdown rally planned for the city’s streets.

Victoria Police Chief Commissioner Shane Patton announced on Wednesday that public transport in and out of the city would be halted from 8am to 2pm on Saturday.

In addition, hard barriers would be set up to lock down the CBD, and more than 2000 police officers would be patrolling the streets, doling out $5500 fines to anyone who did turn up to protest.

The department’s map of what the CBD’s train network will look like between 8am and 2pm on Saturday shows a large portion of the city greyed out; from Coburg in the north to Elsternwick in the south, and from Sunshine in the west to Clifton Hill in the east.

See that map below:

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Victorian population shrinks as pandemic exodus hits

By Jennifer Duke

Victoria is home to 43,000 fewer people than at the start of the pandemic, making it the only state in the nation to record a drop in population since coronavirus hit Australia.

The state shrank by about enough people to fill the Victorian border city of Wodonga in the 12 months to March, according to Australian Bureau of Statistics data.

Victoria’s population has declined 0.6 per cent since the pandemic hit, as international border closures to stop the spread of the virus meant offshore migration failed to make up for those leaving the state.

In every other state and territory there was an increase in residents, ranging from a modest 0.1 per cent population growth in NSW to a high of 0.9 per cent in Queensland.

Church, hospital ED among new Victorian exposure sites

By Cassandra Morgan

A Melbourne church and emergency department are among new COVID-19 exposure sites identified by Victorian health authorities.

  • St Joseph Melkite Catholic Church at Fairfield was listed as a tier-1 or close contact exposure site across three days: Friday, September 10 between 11.15am and 7pm, Saturday, September 11 between 10am and 9pm, and Sunday, September 12 between 10am and 3.30pm.
  • Casey Hospital’s emergency department waiting room at Berwick in Melbourne’s south east was declared a tier-1 site on Tuesday, September 14 between 8.28pm and 11.36pm. The department’s adult short stay unit is a tier-1 site on Wednesday, September 15 between 2.10am and 2.26am.

Anyone who attended those venues at the specified times must immediately get tested for COVID-19 and quarantine for 14 days from the exposure, regardless of whether they receive a negative test result.

Also declared tier-1 sites were Story House Early Learning at Diamond Creek, and TopGear Wheels and Tyres at Heidelberg West, both in Melbourne’s north east.

The early learning centre is a close contact site on Monday, September 6 and Friday, September 10 between 9am and 4pm, while the tyre shop’s exposure period is on Thursday, September 9 and Friday, September 10 between 8am and 5.30pm.

The remainder of new exposure sites are tier-2, including the Casey Hospital emergency department main department, as well as medical clinics and a radiology centre in Melbourne’s south east. Tier-2 contacts must get tested urgently for COVID-19 and isolate until receiving a negative result.

A full list of Victorian exposure sites can be found here.

Bondi backpackers hostel in lockdown after COVID case

By Sarah McPhee

Dozens of people at Noah’s Backpackers Bondi in Sydney’s eastern suburbs are in quarantine after a COVID-19 case was detected at the hostel.

Dozens of people at Noah’s Backpackers Bondi in Sydney’s eastern suburbs are in quarantine.Edwina Pickles

South Eastern Sydney Local Health District today confirmed one case had been identified at the beachfront accommodation on Campbell Parade.

Following the detection, testing was offered on-site on Tuesday, September 14 and thorough cleaning was undertaken.

“There are around 70 people staying at the facility,” the health district said in a statement. “The Public Health Unit is supporting residents to quarantine within the facility.”

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WA Premier fumes over submarine contract

By Hamish Hastie

West Australian Premier Mark McGowan has claimed the federal government had “turned its back” on the state after it selected South Australia for the location of its Collins Class submarine maintenance program.

The long-awaited decision came amidst the announcement of a new trilateral partnership between the US, British and Australian governments called AUKUS, under which Australia will build nuclear submarines using US technology in South Australia that could be based at the HMAS Stirling Naval Base.

WA Premier Mark McGowan.Peter de Kruijff

The work would have been worth about $8.4 billion for the WA economy and, during question time in State Parliament, Mr McGowan said he was disappointed in the decision, given the compelling business case his government had presented to the Commonwealth.

He said the Morrison government had “let our great state down”.

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