
Australian And New Zealand Universities Join Forces To Negotiate Landmark Open Access Deals
Universities across Australia and New Zealand are teaming up to strike a better deal on open access research publishing, in a bold new approach to negotiations with the world's largest academic publishers.
Led by the Council of Australasian University Librarians (CAUL), Universities Australia and Universities New Zealand – Te Pōkai Tara, the sector will take a unified position in upcoming negotiations with Elsevier, Springer Nature, Wiley, and Taylor & Francis.
The moves come amid mounting pressure on university budgets and growing concern about the rising cost of open access publishing. The sector is now pursuing new agreements that are more sustainable, transparent and equitable, and deliver better value for the public investment in research.
'These are crucial negotiations for the future of research in our regions,' said Professor Iain Martin, Vice Chancellor of Deakin University and Chair of the sector's new oversight committee. 'Our universities are committed to making research openly accessible to maximise its impact for the communities we serve. The negotiations offer an important opportunity to establish new models that align more closely with the needs of our sector and the public who fund and benefit from our work.'
The cross-Tasman initiative will be overseen by a senior academic advisory group, comprising university leaders and university librarians from both countries. The group will ensure that any new agreements reflect the changing needs of researchers and institutions alike.
Luke Sheehy, Chief Executive of Universities Australia, said the move reflects the sector's broader commitment to collaboration and reform.
'Universities are stepping up to find smarter, more sustainable ways to support open access. By negotiating together, we're giving ourselves the best shot at securing a fairer deal for our researchers - and better value for public investment,' he said.
'Much of the research done by universities in Australia and New Zealand is funded by taxpayers. We have obligations to make sure that the knowledge we generate is widely and freely available and not hidden behind paywalls,' said Dr Bronwen Kelly, Deputy Chief Executive of Universities New Zealand – Te Pōkai Tara. "Where making the knowledge we generate widely available is best done by working through global publishers, we have obligations to make sure that we do this in a way that ensures the best value for taxpayers.'
CAUL Content Procurement Committee Chair Hero Macdonald said the joint approach marks a pivotal shift for the sector.
'This new approach reflects our sector's shared commitment to achieving a sustainable, fair, equitable and truly open future for the region's research', Hero said.
Angus Cook, Director of Content Procurement at CAUL, said the collaboration was designed to drive better outcomes for both researchers and institutions.
'This isn't just about cost, it's about securing fair access, improving transparency and supporting a healthy publishing ecosystem that works for our region.
Negotiations will continue throughout 2025, with new agreements beginning from January 2026.
About CAUL
The Council of Australasian University Librarians (CAUL) is the peak collegiate body for the leaders of university libraries in Australasia and Oceania. It facilitates connection and collaboration and optimises its collective knowledge, expertise, and resources to achieve strategic outcomes at scale in priority areas for the university library sector. CAUL is the trusted voice of the university library sector in the region.
About UA
Universities Australia is the voice of Australia's universities. As the peak body for the sector, we advocate the vast social, economic and cultural value of higher education and research to Australia and the world. On behalf of our 39 member universities, we provide expert policy advice, analysis and statistical evidence, and media commentary on higher education. We also make submissions, develop policy across the sector, represent Australia's universities on government and industry-appointed bodies and partner with university sectors in other countries to enable bilateral and global collaborations.
About UNZ
Universities New Zealand—Te Pōkai Tara is the sector voice for all eight universities, representing their collective views nationally and internationally, championing the quality education they deliver, and the important contribution they make to New Zealand, economically, socially and culturally.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scoop
4 days ago
- Scoop
Datadog Expands ANZ Leadership Team With Appointment Of Roz Gregory
Press Release – Datadog Gregory to steer multi-year growth plans following strong local expansion and opening of Datadogs first Australian data centre presence. Datadog, Inc. (NASDAQ: DDOG), the monitoring and security platform for cloud applications, has appointed Roz Gregory as its Regional Vice President for Australia and New Zealand. The position is integral to the company's regional multi-year growth plans, reflects ongoing customer acquisition, and supports continued trans-Tasman investment, including the recent opening of its first Australian data centre presence. Gregory is tasked with expanding Datadog's enterprise business, with strategic focus on highly-regulated industries, including government, banking, financial services, healthcare and higher education. She is responsible for driving new customer opportunities and expanding existing relationships in concert with Datadog's channels and alliances teams, and adding headcount to support regional demand. 'Enterprise customers are dealing with ever more regulatory complexity and digital transformation, which puts innovation at risk, particularly with AI,' said Gregory. 'Joining Datadog was the natural choice for me because of its ability to enable companies to predict and respond to these changes and prevent incidents. Given the rate of Datadog's product evolution and growth, this is an exciting time to join the team.' Gregory joins Datadog with more than 30 years' experience, having advised on, led and delivered change management and digital transformation projects in multiple roles and industries. She has held senior leadership positions at VMware by Broadcom, Pivotal Software and Telstra, among others, in which she pioneered advisory boards to enable major strategic initiatives for high-profile customers, including government agencies. 'Roz has deep experience and been instrumental in driving successful global transformation projects as a consultant, an enterprise customer, and a technology vendor,' said Rob Thorne, Vice President for Asia-Pacific and Japan at Datadog. 'Her adaptable leadership style, extensive experience in leading high performance teams, and knowledge of the complexities and regulatory pressures faced by companies in A/NZ will be crucial in steering the next phase of Datadog's growth plans in Australia and New Zealand.' Gregory's appointment follows the opening of Datadog's first local availability zone in Australia, which enables the company, its partners and more than 1,100 A/NZ customers to store and process data locally to meet applicable Australian privacy, security and data storage requirements. About Datadog Datadog is the observability and security platform for cloud applications. Our SaaS platform integrates and automates infrastructure monitoring, application performance monitoring, log management, user experience monitoring, cloud security and many other capabilities to provide unified, real-time observability and security for our customers' entire technology stack. Datadog is used by organizations of all sizes and across a wide range of industries to enable digital transformation and cloud migration, drive collaboration among development, operations, security and business teams, accelerate time to market for applications, reduce time to problem resolution, secure applications and infrastructure, understand user behavior and track key business metrics.

RNZ News
5 days ago
- RNZ News
Private equity firm to buy major stake in Forsyth Barr
Forsyth Barr has assets under management of more than $30b. Photo: RNZ / Rebekah Parsons-King Sydney-based private equity firm Mercury Capital has agreed to buy a 25-30 percent shareholding from existing shareholders. Mercury Capital manages more than $2 billion in funds and specialises in providing growth capital to established businesses on both sides of the Tasman. The offer is subject to shareholder approval and other conditions, with completion expected during August. The company said the investment would be positive for the firm, staff and clients, and showed confidence in its strategy, market position and future growth. "Mercury Capital shares our view that trusted personalised advice is more important than ever to help clients navigate a world of accelerating change, disruption and opportunity," Forsyth Barr managing director Neil Paviour-Smith said. He said the proposed partnership was a natural next step in the company's ongoing evolution. Mercury Capital's founder and about half of its staff are New Zealanders. Forsyth Barr acquired another investment management business Hobson Wealth in 2023, boosting its staff to about 300, with assets under management of more than $30b. The New Zealand investment sector has been through a shake up in recent years with a merger of various firms to form First Cape , of which Australian private equity firm Pacific Equity Partners owns about a third . Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.


Scoop
25-07-2025
- Scoop
Australian And New Zealand Universities Join Forces To Negotiate Landmark Open Access Deals
Joint media statement by Council of Australasian University Librarians (CAUL), Universities Australia and Universities New Zealand—Te Pōkai Tara: Universities across Australia and New Zealand are teaming up to strike a better deal on open access research publishing, in a bold new approach to negotiations with the world's largest academic publishers. Led by the Council of Australasian University Librarians (CAUL), Universities Australia and Universities New Zealand – Te Pōkai Tara, the sector will take a unified position in upcoming negotiations with Elsevier, Springer Nature, Wiley, and Taylor & Francis. The moves come amid mounting pressure on university budgets and growing concern about the rising cost of open access publishing. The sector is now pursuing new agreements that are more sustainable, transparent and equitable, and deliver better value for the public investment in research. 'These are crucial negotiations for the future of research in our regions,' said Professor Iain Martin, Vice Chancellor of Deakin University and Chair of the sector's new oversight committee. 'Our universities are committed to making research openly accessible to maximise its impact for the communities we serve. The negotiations offer an important opportunity to establish new models that align more closely with the needs of our sector and the public who fund and benefit from our work.' The cross-Tasman initiative will be overseen by a senior academic advisory group, comprising university leaders and university librarians from both countries. The group will ensure that any new agreements reflect the changing needs of researchers and institutions alike. Luke Sheehy, Chief Executive of Universities Australia, said the move reflects the sector's broader commitment to collaboration and reform. 'Universities are stepping up to find smarter, more sustainable ways to support open access. By negotiating together, we're giving ourselves the best shot at securing a fairer deal for our researchers - and better value for public investment,' he said. 'Much of the research done by universities in Australia and New Zealand is funded by taxpayers. We have obligations to make sure that the knowledge we generate is widely and freely available and not hidden behind paywalls,' said Dr Bronwen Kelly, Deputy Chief Executive of Universities New Zealand – Te Pōkai Tara. "Where making the knowledge we generate widely available is best done by working through global publishers, we have obligations to make sure that we do this in a way that ensures the best value for taxpayers.' CAUL Content Procurement Committee Chair Hero Macdonald said the joint approach marks a pivotal shift for the sector. 'This new approach reflects our sector's shared commitment to achieving a sustainable, fair, equitable and truly open future for the region's research', Hero said. Angus Cook, Director of Content Procurement at CAUL, said the collaboration was designed to drive better outcomes for both researchers and institutions. 'This isn't just about cost, it's about securing fair access, improving transparency and supporting a healthy publishing ecosystem that works for our region. Negotiations will continue throughout 2025, with new agreements beginning from January 2026. About CAUL The Council of Australasian University Librarians (CAUL) is the peak collegiate body for the leaders of university libraries in Australasia and Oceania. It facilitates connection and collaboration and optimises its collective knowledge, expertise, and resources to achieve strategic outcomes at scale in priority areas for the university library sector. CAUL is the trusted voice of the university library sector in the region. About UA Universities Australia is the voice of Australia's universities. As the peak body for the sector, we advocate the vast social, economic and cultural value of higher education and research to Australia and the world. On behalf of our 39 member universities, we provide expert policy advice, analysis and statistical evidence, and media commentary on higher education. We also make submissions, develop policy across the sector, represent Australia's universities on government and industry-appointed bodies and partner with university sectors in other countries to enable bilateral and global collaborations. About UNZ Universities New Zealand—Te Pōkai Tara is the sector voice for all eight universities, representing their collective views nationally and internationally, championing the quality education they deliver, and the important contribution they make to New Zealand, economically, socially and culturally.