logo
Australia govt confirms $2.2-B funding for 2032 Brisbane Olympics venues

Australia govt confirms $2.2-B funding for 2032 Brisbane Olympics venues

GMA Network14 hours ago
A view of the city skyline of Brisbane, the city expected to be announced as host for the 2032 Olympic Games, in Brisbane, Australia. Picture taken July 4, 2021. REUTERS/Jaimi Joy/File Photo
SYDNEY - The Australian government has confirmed it will contribute A$3.435 billion (US$2.25 billion) towards the A$7.1 billion cost of building the venues for the 2032 Brisbane Olympics, clearing the way for the start of construction.
Queensland taxpayers and private finance will provide the balance of the money for the 17 new and upgraded venues for the Summer Games under the funding deal announced by state and federal governments on Thursday.
"The Sydney 2000 Games left an incredible legacy and many Australians have memories that have lasted for decades," Federal Infrastructure Minister Catherine King said in a statement.
"We are ready to deliver a Brisbane 2032 games that will leave the same incredible legacy for Queensland.
"The Australian government's commitment of A$3.4 billion towards the Games venues is the single largest contribution any Australian government has made towards sporting infrastructure in this country."
Brisbane was awarded hosting rights for the Games in 2021 but political wrangling over the venues meant the final plans were not decided until March this year.
Organising committee chief Andrew Liveris welcomed Thursday's announcement as a "significant shift in forward momentum".
"I thank the Australian and Queensland governments for moving swiftly following the Australian government's recent return to office to agree on intergovernmental funding that will ensure physical works can get underway ..." he said.
The main stadium, which is estimated to cost A$3.7 billion, will be built in the city's Victoria Park and seat 60,000 during the Olympics and 3,000 more for Australian Rules football and cricket matches after 2032.
A new aquatics centre to host the swimming in 2032 will also be built nearby at an estimated cost of A$650 million.
"Today's landmark agreement is the beginning of a new partnership that sets the pathway to deliver 2032 as the best Games ever," said Queensland's Deputy Prime Minister Jarrod Bleijie.
"We've also launched procurement on four key projects to kickstart the delivery of world-class venues in the delivery plan.
"I can also announce that we will start site investigations at Victoria Park for Australia's most exciting sporting precinct that will be home to the new main stadium and the new National Aquatic Centre."
Liveris said in May that he did not think any ground would be broken on the two major new venues until the end of 2026.
The federal government has already committed A$12.4 billion for local transport improvements that the Queensland government believes are necessary for 2032, the statement said.
($1 = 1.5235 Australian dollars)
—Reuters
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Russia pounds Kyiv with largest drone attack, hours after Trump-Putin call
Russia pounds Kyiv with largest drone attack, hours after Trump-Putin call

GMA Network

time5 hours ago

  • GMA Network

Russia pounds Kyiv with largest drone attack, hours after Trump-Putin call

People pass by destroyed vehicles at the site of a damaged school, which was hit during Russian drone and missile strikes, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine, July 4, 2025. REUTERS/Alina Smutko KYIV - Russia pummeled Kyiv with the largest drone attack of the war, killing one person, injuring at least 23 and damaging buildings across the capital hours after US President Donald Trump spoke to Russia's Vladimir Putin, officials said on Friday. Air raid sirens, the whine of kamikaze drones and booming detonations reverberated from early evening until dawn as Russia launched what Ukraine's Air Force said was a total of 539 drones and 11 missiles. Families huddled in underground metro stations for shelter and acrid smoke hung over the city center. Kyiv's military administration chief said on Friday afternoon a body had been found in the wreckage of one of the strike sites. Outside a high-rise apartment block damaged by a drone, residents stood around surveying the scene as the clean-up job began. Some cried. Others looked on silently. "I woke up to the sound of explosions, first the Shahed drones started buzzing, and then the explosions began," said 40-year-old resident Maria Hilchenko. "Then people started screaming outside. The explosions from the Shaheds kept coming." Shahed drones are an Iranian design, a variant of which is now manufactured in Russia. President Volodymyr Zelenskiy called the attack "deliberately massive and cynical", noting the first sirens blared as news came in of Putin and Trump's call. Later on Friday Zelenskiy spoke to Trump and the pair agreed to work on increasing Kyiv's capability to "defend the sky". He added they discussed joint defense production, as well as joint purchases and investments. The US has paused some deliveries of missiles amid concerns about low stockpiles. Kyiv officials said the attack damaged about 40 apartment blocks, passenger railway infrastructure, five schools and kindergartens, cafes and many cars in six of Kyiv's 10 districts. Poland said the consular section of its embassy was damaged in central Kyiv, adding that staff were unharmed. Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said a Chinese component had been found in one of the Shahed drones attacking Kyiv, adding it had been found shortly after China's consulate in the southern city of Odesa suffered minor damage in a separate strike. "What an irony," Sybiha wrote on X. Russian airstrikes on Kyiv have intensified in recent weeks and included some of the deadliest assaults of the war on the city of three million people. Russia's Defense Ministry said drone factories, a military airfield and an oil refinery were among targets it struck in Kyiv with what it called high-precision weapons. Ukraine did not give details of any militarily valuable targets. Call for sanctions Trump said that the call with Putin on Thursday resulted in no progress at all on efforts to end the war, and the Kremlin reiterated that Moscow would keep pushing to solve the conflict's "root causes". The decision by Washington to halt some shipments of critical weapons to Ukraine prompted warnings by Kyiv that the move would weaken its ability to defend against intensifying airstrikes and battlefield advances. Germany said it is in talks on buying Patriot air defense systems to bridge the gap. On Friday, Zelenskiy called for increased pressure on Moscow to change its "dumb, destructive behavior". "For every such strike against people and human life, they must feel appropriate sanctions and other blows to their economy, their revenues, and their infrastructure," he said. Ukraine's Air Force said it destroyed 478 of the air weapons Russia launched overnight. Airstrikes were recorded in eight locations, with nine missiles and 63 drones, it added. Social media videos showed people running to seek shelter, firefighters fighting blazes in the dark and ruined buildings with windows and facades blown out. Both sides deny targeting civilians in the war that Russia launched with its full-scale invasion in February 2022. Thousands of civilians have been killed in the conflict, the vast majority of them Ukrainian. Many more soldiers are believed to have been killed on the front line, but neither side releases military casualty figures. Late on Thursday, Russian shelling killed five people in and near the eastern Ukrainian city of Pokrovsk, Ukraine said. — Reuters

Japan's heat-stressed matcha tea output struggles to meet soaring global demand
Japan's heat-stressed matcha tea output struggles to meet soaring global demand

GMA Network

time6 hours ago

  • GMA Network

Japan's heat-stressed matcha tea output struggles to meet soaring global demand

A sign board reading 'Matcha is out of stock' is displayed in front of a tea store in Uji, Kyoto prefecture, Japan, June 10, 2025. REUTERS/Michele Pek UJI, Japan - Matcha lovers, brace your wallets! Record temperatures in Japan have curbed matcha green tea production this year, straining supplies and driving prices to all-time highs amid booming global demand for the trendy beverage, farmers and industry officials said. The Kyoto region, which accounts for about a quarter of Japan's production of tencha - the stemmed leaves dried and ground into matcha - was hit by severe heatwaves last summer during Japan's hottest year on record, which led to weak yields in the recent April-May harvest. Masahiro Yoshida, a sixth-generation farmer, was only able to harvest 1.5 tons of tencha this year, down a quarter from his typical harvest of two tons. "Last year's summer was so hot that it damaged the bushes, so we couldn't pluck as many tea leaves," he told Reuters from his storefront in Uji, south of Kyoto. Global demand for matcha has surged in recent years, driven by millennials and Gen Z buyers seeking healthier choices, with hip cafes globally offering matcha lattes, smoothies, and desserts. The finely ground tea is prized as an antioxidant and for higher caffeine content than other green teas. Viral social media traction last autumn turbocharged demand, prompting some wholesalers such as Singapore-based Tealife to occasionally impose purchase limits. Yuki Ishii, Tealife's founder, said matcha demand from its customers grew ten-fold last year and is still rising, even as the amount available from Japan is declining. "I'm basically always out of stock," he said. Japan produced 5,336 tons of tencha in 2024, according to the Japanese Tea Production Association, a nearly 2.7-fold increase from ten years earlier, as more farmers switched to the crop. However, the association said it expects lower matcha output this year. "I think many were hoping for a higher yield harvest this year to reduce some of the shortages ... but it doesn't seem like this is going to be the case," said Marc Falzon, who buys tea from Uji farmers for his New Jersey-based milling firm, Ooika Co. Japan's green tea exports, including matcha, rose 25% by value to 36.4 billion yen ($252 million) in 2024, driven largely by growing demand for powdered teas such as matcha, according to data from the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries. By volume, Japan's green tea exports rose 16%. Tencha prices have climbed to record highs, with a May auction in Kyoto fetching 8,235 yen per kilogram, a 170% increase from a year earlier and well above the previous record of 4,862 yen set in 2016, according to the Global Japanese Tea Association. Japanese producers are trying to increase matcha output, but that won't solve the current shortage as the new fields they are planting need five years before they can be harvested, said Falzon. "I suspect we'll see even more dramatic price increases." ($1 = 144.2000 yen) — Reuters

Chavez Jr. expected to be deported to Mexico to serve sentence, Mexican president says
Chavez Jr. expected to be deported to Mexico to serve sentence, Mexican president says

GMA Network

time7 hours ago

  • GMA Network

Chavez Jr. expected to be deported to Mexico to serve sentence, Mexican president says

FILE PHOTO: Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. reacts before fighting against Jake Paul at Honda Center in Anaheim, California, U.S. June 28, 2025. Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images via REUTERS. File Photo MEXICO CITY - Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said on Friday that she expects boxer Julio Cesar Chavez Jr to be deported to Mexico to serve a sentence for arms trafficking after being detained in Los Angeles by US immigration authorities. The US Department of Homeland Security said Chavez was determined to be in the country illegally last week after he made fraudulent statements on a 2024 application for permanent residence. Sheinbaum, in her regular morning press conference, said Mexico has had a warrant for his arrest since 2023, stemming from an investigation initiated in 2019. She added that Mexico had failed to bring him into custody over that period as Chavez Jr had spent most of his time in the United States. "So that there is a deportation and that he can serve the sentence, that's the process the attorney general's office is working on," Sheinbaum told reporters. On Thursday, Homeland Security said the 39-year-old boxer, son of Mexican world champion fighter Julio Cesar Chavez, is suspected of having ties to Mexico's Sinaloa Cartel, which Washington has designated a foreign terrorist organization. A lawyer for him called the allegations "outrageous." His wife, Frida Munoz Chavez, was previously married to the son of former Sinaloa cartel leader Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, who is serving a life sentence in a U.S. prison. The son, Edgar, was assassinated in 2008. Sheinbaum said she did not know if Chavez Jr had links to the Sinaloa Cartel. —Reuters

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store