Thanks for joining us today. We’ll be back tomorrow with more live coverage. Here’s a quick recap:
- Defence Minister Richard Marles has awarded a $10 billion navy warship contract to Japanese firm Mitsubishi Heavy Industries. The Japanese firm beat out a German one for the contract, and the US was apparently in favour of the Japanese bid, but Marles said this afternoon that the US did not influence the final decision.
- Geraldine Slattery, the Australian head of BHP, has taken sharp aim at a plan from the Productivity Commission that would increase tax on the business.
- NBN Co and US tech giant Amazon have announced a partnership that will see the ageing fleet of Sky Muster satellites replaced with Amazon’s low Earth orbit (LEO) satellite technology. The two are promising faster internet speeds for 300,000 regional Australians, though unions want the government to make sure workers and suppliers are treated ethically.
- The latest data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics showed household spending increased by 0.5 per cent in June, after a 1 per cent rise the month before.
- Israel said it would allow gradual and controlled entry of goods to Gaza through local merchants, as aid groups say Israel’s week-old measures to allow more aid in to the beleaguered Gaza Strip are far from sufficient.
- One of the most powerful batteries built anywhere in the world has started operating at the site of an old coal-fired power station on the New South Wales Central Coast.
- And in Alice Springs, paramedics say a 26-year-old man survived seven days lost in the Northern Territory desert by drinking water from discarded bottles before being found alive.