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As it happened: Ley avoids leadership challenge, formally dumps net zero target; Nvidia-backed Firmus raises $500m for AI data centres

Alexander Darling and Emily Kaine
Updated ,first published

What we covered today

By Alexander Darling

Thanks for joining us, here’s a quick wrap of the day.

  • Critics are questioning how the Liberals can promise to bring more coal and gas into the system while pledging to reduce emissions as the party tries to paper over climate policy divisions. After announcing yesterday the party was abandoning net zero, Opposition Leader Sussan Ley has also tried to quell concerns the party is moving away from environmental protection, especially with younger voters. “If energy is unaffordable, everything is unaffordable,” she said today.
  • Australians who commit a crime could have their working with children check revoked as soon as they’re found guilty by the end of 2026, as part of a set of reforms aimed at better protecting young people from predators.

    Federal Attorney-General Michelle Rowland used a meeting of her state and territory counterparts on Friday to announce $37 million in funding towards enhanced national monitoring of working with children checks.

  • The prime minister said he supported Australia’s Border Force in protecting the country’s borders after footage exposed the force’s purchasing of old boats to give to illegal fishers and people smugglers who sail into Australian waters in unseaworthy craft.
  • The Australian sharemarket has slumped after Wall Street sank to its second-worst day since April, amid questions over whether AI stocks are overvalued and whether cuts to interest rates will actually happen.
  • The BBC has apologised to Donald Trump over edits it made to a 2021 speech that appeared to show him directly inciting his supporters to riot at the US Capitol, but says it will not pay compensation.

    The corporation also said it will not air the 2024 edition of its Panorama program again. Earlier, it emerged that another BBC program, Newsnight, showed a similar edit of Trump’s speech in 2022.

  • ANZ Bank’s culture suffered from problems including complacency, a lack of curiosity and a reluctance to deliver bad news, a new analysis released by the bank says.
  • In other bank news, Westpac has paid back more than $50 million to almost 47,000 staff who were underpaid by the banking giant over 11 years due to a series of failures in its systems.

With AAP

Nvidia-backed Australian company Firmus raises $500 million for AI data centre push

By

Firmus Technologies Ltd raised $500 million to accelerate its push to build out renewable energy-powered artificial intelligence data centres across Australia.

The round will boost the Nvidia Corp-backed company’s valuation to around $6 billion, it said in a statement Friday. A previous round in September valued it at $1.85 billion.

Tim Rosenfield, Co-CEO, Firmus Technologies.Oscar Colman

Firmus is among scores of data centre operators expanding rapidly across the planet, seeking to power AI services that are quickly gaining popularity.

Watch as Russia’s first AI robot faceplants, gets hidden behind black screen

By Alexander Darling

The theme music from Rocky was meant to herald the glorious unveiling of the first Russian “humanoid” robot powered by artificial intelligence.

Instead, the soundtrack choice almost became darkly funny.

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For while Rocky Balboa made it triumphantly to the top of the stairs in the film, this robot needed only a few wobbly steps before it appeared spent.

AIDOL, as it’s known, stumbled on stage during its debut walkout in Moscow on Tuesday, attempted to raise its right arm and wave to the audience, but appeared to lose balance and fell face-down.

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ANZ’s culture suffered from ‘complacency’, ‘lack of curiosity’: review

By Clancy Yeates

ANZ Bank’s culture suffered from problems including complacency, a lack of curiosity and a reluctance to deliver bad news, a new analysis released by the bank says.

ANZ has faced hefty penalties from regulators this year, after a bond trading scandal and other legal breaches exposed wider problems with governance and how the bank handles “non-financial risk”.

A review into ANZ has been released.Fairfax Media

In response, the bank has been required to develop a plan to address weaknesses in its risk management and culture. It also hired consultants from McKinsey to explore the underlying “mindsets, behaviours and cultural traits” that sit beneath problems in its approach to non-financial risk, and on Friday, ANZ released a summary of McKinsey’s findings.

The five-page summary pointed to various shortcomings in the culture at ANZ.

Severe thunderstorms forecast over weekend

By Alexander Darling

Thunderstorms have begun across Australia’s eastern edge, but much of the country will be at risk as the weekend continues.

The Bureau of Meteorology is reporting severe thunderstorms will be possible for much of south-eastern NSW, northern NSW and south-east Queensland and the red centre on Saturday.

While on Sunday, an area from Port Macquarie, NSW, to Brisbane will remain at risk of severe thunderstorms.

What Ley did next

By Paul Sakkal and Brittany Busch

Sussan Ley has pre-empted a new conservative Liberal threat to the stability of her leadership by opening a debate on lower migration on the same day her party’s conservative flank triumphed in its anti-net zero push.

The opposition leader put migration on the agenda at the annual John Howard Lecture on Thursday night, just hours after settling her party’s internal debate over net zero by siding with the Nationals over her moderate colleagues, preserving her leadership for the immediate future.

Read more here.

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Accused rapist who led police to alleged childcare paedophile pleads not guilty

By Erin Pearson and Alexander Darling

An accused child rapist who led police to childcare worker Joshua Brown will fight dozens of sex offence related charges in court.

Michael Simon Wilson, 36, appeared in Melbourne Magistrates’ Court on Friday via video link from custody where he chose to fast-track his more than 60 charges to a higher court.

Read more here.

Earlier today, Attorney-General Michelle Rowland announced $37 million in funding towards enhanced national monitoring of working with children checks.

Calls for reform to the system have been growing since Brown was charged in late June.

After humanity’s first BBQ in space, stranded astronauts finally heading home

By Ken Moritsugu

Three Chinese astronauts stranded at their nation’s space station after their spacecraft was apparently hit by space debris departed for home on Friday using the craft that had brought a replacement crew, China’s space agency said.

Their capsule was expected to land in a remote part of north-west China’s Inner Mongolia region later the same day.

The astronauts were on a six-month rotation at the space station and had been originally scheduled to return on November 5, four days after the new crew arrived.

Their return was delayed for more than a week, and in that time, the trio became briefly world-famous for passing the time with a barbecue.

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Assistant minister congratulates Barnaby Joyce for ‘de facto leadership’ of Liberals

By Alexander Darling

Earlier today, former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull (a Liberal during his tenure) chided the Liberal Party as having “the memory of goldfish and the dining habits of piranhas” when it came to energy policy.

It appears the assistant minister to the prime minister is also keen to get in on the witty one-liners when it comes to critiquing their decision to abandon net zero.

Member for New England Barnaby Joyce at Parliament House in Canberra.Alex Ellinghausen

Speaking on ABC News this hour, Patrick Gorman was asked about this development, and replied: “Firstly, let me congratulate Barnaby Joyce on his de facto leadership of the Liberal Party.”

Joyce, a former deputy prime minister, introduced a bill to parliament earlier this year to repeal net zero, and said he was considering leaving the National Party over a number of issues, including net zero.

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Australian shares hit almost four-month low

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The Australian share market has closed at an almost four-month low after suffering its worst day in 10 weeks amid a global pullback in risk assets.

The benchmark S&P/ASX200 index on Friday dropped 118.9 points, or 1.36 per cent, to 8634.5, while the broader All Ordinaries fell 127.5 points, or 1.41 per cent, to 8907.

It was the fourth day of declines in a row for the ASX200, as well as its third straight week of losses.

It dropped 1.54 per cent for the week, its worst weekly performance since a 3.9 per cent loss for the first week of April.

The Australian dollar was buying 65.32 US cents, from 65.57 US cents on Thursday.

AAP

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