Future NT 2025: Tivan, CDU, Tamboran Resources, Santos, Darwin Port, NT Government, Sitzler partner for Mindil Beach Casino Resort event
The NT Government has outlined a plan for economic recovery – the Rebuilding the Economy Strategy 2025-2028 – which includes population and workforce growth targets, cutting red tape to ensure investor confidence and strengthening the Northern Territory's role in national economic growth, energy security and defence.
For the fourth year, the NT News' annual Future Northern Territory advocacy program returns this month and will interrogate how the government's strategy is progressing, while also applying an aspirational lens to encourage long term vision and planning to ensure a prosperous NT for generations to come.
While the government's strategy for the NT economy is important, private investment is pivotal to growth.
This year the NT News is proud to partner with leading businesses working to grow the Territory including Tivan Limited, Charles Darwin University, Tamboran Resources, Santos and Darwin Port, as major partners alongside NT Government.
Also joining this year's program are minor partners Airport Development Group and Sitzler.
Supporting partner Mindil Beach Casino Resort will once again host the premier economic event in its popular pavilion venue.
Content themes for the 2025 Future NT campaign include defence, energy, education, tourism, sport and workforce growth, with a call for leaders to set a bold vision for the decades ahead.
Speakers at this year's event include NT Chief Minister Lia Finocchiaro, nationally renowned social researcher and demographer Mark McCrindle, Tivan Limited executive chairman Grant Wilson, Darwin Port CEO Peter Dummett, CDU Deputy Vice Chancellor Research and Community Connection Dr Steve Rogers, and NT Department of Mining and Energy CEO Alister Trier, with more speakers to be announced soon.
Tickets are on sale now for the event which will be held from 11.30am on Friday, July 18.
Hashtags

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

ABC News
an hour ago
- ABC News
Footy boot exchange program cuts waste, saves families money
A not-for-profit is ensuring aspiring young footballers with fast-growing feet always have access to boots that fit, and that their outgrown shoes go to a good home. The Boot Exchange helps families swap and share footy boots, free of charge, so no-one misses out. Matt Lawley, co-founder of enterprise, said the concept was simple: "You bring an old pair of boots that your children have grown out of and exchange them for a new pair." He said many parents, already facing cost-of-living pressures, struggled to buy new boots for their kids every year, but ended up with still-wearable spare pairs their children had grown out of. 'There were just so many pairs of boots that were gathering dust in sheds and garages,' he said. 'The idea of this is that you really never need to buy a new pair of boots. "You just grow out of them and exchange them for a different pair.' Mr Lawley said the kids at his local soccer club in North Beach loved coming out and seeing the pre-loved footy boots on display. "They're always coming in after their games on a Sunday and checking to see what new boots have been dropped off and what changes have been made to the display," he said. But it is the deeper lesson of learning how to reuse and recycle that is at the heart of this not-for-profit's mission. He said some boots had been worn only a few times and were in great condition. "They've got so much life left in them," he said. Sustainability expert Professor David Gilchrist, a director at the Centre for Public Value at the University of Western Australia, said buying used goods, through places like The Boot Exchange, could help reduce household waste simply by shifting shopper attitudes. "It helps young people … understand that second-hand goods are just as good as brand-new goods and that they should be using those resources wisely. "Where we have people struggling to make a living, we can actually enjoy the benefit of second-hand goods while still keeping our cost of living down. "I think there's some really good messaging as well as practical sustainability outcomes from this kind of activity." The program is having a positive effect on the community in North Beach. Mother-of-two Natalie Charlton, who has exchanged her seven-year-old daughter's soccer boots twice, said the experience helped teach her child about the importance of sustainability. "It's just that kind of mind shift change of, 'Does it have to be new to be good?'." Keeping costs down is something that is important to Ms Charlton and her family as they manage their household budget. "If we can reduce money in other ways and our kids can still continue to play sport, we're happy," she said. 'I think the boots are so good because they always look pretty new. "They've been used for one season. We've seen boots here that we haven't seen at the store." Mr Lawley said he hoped the concept could be rolled out to more clubs across Australia. He says any club could get started by building a "bank of boots".

News.com.au
an hour ago
- News.com.au
MCC ex-boss David Jones' secret mancave scores big payday
A Cremorne warehouse where former Melbourne Cricket Club president David Jones displayed his lifetime's collection of classic cars and memorabilia has revved to a $2.2m sale. Mr Jones' family put the property on the market following his death in February and it went under the hammer earlier this week. It's good news for the remainder of the 750 auctions scheduled across Victoria this week, according to PropTrack. $20m upgrade for TAC HQ targets working parents, access, inclusion Aside from his time at the cricket club's helm, Mr Jones served as gaming and lottery giant Tattersall's chairman and for nine years as the Moomba Festival's chairman. He was also an ex-Victorian Chamber of Commerce director and a Rotary Club of Melbourne long-term member and past president. The avid car collector's warehouse at 116 Green St showcased a 1972 Ferrari Dino GT, 1955 MG Roadster, circa-1913 '6-666' number plate and collectibles such as vehicle parts. Commercial real estate agency Colliers Melbourne director Ben Baines said the cars and other items would be sold separately by Donington Auctions on July 12 and 13. 'A lot of groups asked us if they could purchase both the property and memorabilia,' Mr Baines said. However, the 290sq m warehouse itself turned out to be popular with buyers after six bidders contested Thursday's auction. 'The majority of those parties were looking to have something similar to what Mr Jones had,' Mr Baines said. A local owner-occupier snapped up the warehouse that was listed with circa-$2m price hopes. Mr Baines said the sale demonstrated the strength of Cremorne and Richmond's commercial market, which has seen increased demand since the Reserve Bank's rate cuts earlier this year. 'A lot of that demand has been from interstate and international buyers as well,' Mr Baines added. Fellow listing agent, Teska Carson director Matthew Feld, said that the warehouse was one of the best he had seen hit the local market for some time. 'We had expected it to generate strong interest,' he said. Donington Auctions' website states that the 1972 Ferrari GT Dino Coupe is expected to sell for a sum between $800,000 to $1m, with bids starting at $400,000.

ABC News
an hour ago
- ABC News
Tasmanian Refugee Legal Service reports rising number of LGBTQIA+ clients who 'fear for their life' if returned home
Holding hands, a kiss — they're simple and sweet displays of affection. But Sam* doesn't take them for granted. Sam comes from a country where being gay is considered "against the order of nature" and is enough to land them more than a decade in jail. They said it's a place where civilians "take matters into their own hands" and turn their neighbours in, where intimate details of someone's life are shamed in the media. It wasn't until Sam came to Australia as a teenager that they were free to explore their sexuality for the first time — albeit in secret from their parents. "I was more comfortable with just being myself and expressing that part of myself," they said. So, when their family's application for permanent residency was knocked back, and the possibility of returning loomed large, Sam took matters into their own hands. "I was like, 'no, I can't go back, I can't hide myself anymore,'" Sam said. LGBTQIA+ people with a well-founded fear of persecution in their home country based on their gender or sexuality can be considered refugees under Australia's Migration Act. Sam turned to the Tasmanian Refugee Legal Service (TRLS), arguing to the Department of Home Affairs that being gay exposed them to serious harm. Their application for permanent protection was successful. "I felt like a weight was lifted off my back, like I was so relieved," they said. Sixty-seven countries criminalise people for their sexual orientation, with punishments ranging from months behind bars to a life sentence. In some places, it's the death penalty. TRLS principal lawyer Patrick O'Connor said the danger often extended beyond the state, to hostility from families and the community and systemic discrimination in employment, housing, health and education. Mr O'Connor said the service was representing a growing number of clients in similar circumstances to Sam — as were his interstate colleagues — the majority coming to the end of student, work or holiday visas. And he believed there could be many more with legitimate asylum claims — potentially hundreds in Tasmania alone — that hadn't come forward, likely out of fear of retribution or because they didn't understand Australia's domestic law. Mr O'Connor is seeking funding to dedicate a lawyer to this caseload, and to run community workshops around Tasmania providing general legal education to help people understand the law, and make them feel comfortable approaching the service. "There's a lot at stake for the applicant," he said. "Providing legal representation is critical, and is life-changing, and can make all the difference." More community outreach and legal support is something Migrant Resource Centre Tasmania also endorses. But she said it was vital all new arrivals, not just from the LGBTQIA+ community, were taught gender and sexuality discrimination was not tolerated in Australia. "All people who have diverse gender identities and sexual orientations are vulnerable in the community, but for those who are from migrant backgrounds, from refugee backgrounds and from asylum seeker backgrounds, they're extremely vulnerable," she said. "They may be particularly wary of connecting with their cultural community here because they know that their cultural community won't accept them and will discriminate against them. Ms Long said it was vital that services understood how various aspects of someone's identity — including country of origin, race, ethnicity, language, gender and sexuality — intersected and supported LGBTQIA+ migrants accordingly. For Sam, the new-found security has "opened up a whole world of possibilities". *Name has been changed.