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Weighty plan to use shafts to mine energy

Cameron Magusic

Cameron Magusic summarises the fortnight's innovation news from around the globe

A new rig being built in Edinburgh is testing the concept of using weights to store and release energy.


Scottish naval engineer and founder of Gravitricity, Peter Fraenkel, developed the idea as an alternative to storing energy in batteries, Ewout Kieckens writes for Innovation Origins.


The rig features a tower that is 15m high with two 25-tonne weights suspended from steel cables.


If the trial is successful, the concept will be used in mine shafts up to 1500m in depth and 5000-tonne weights.


Nominations are now open for the 2021 Robotics Business Review Robotics Innovation Awards.


The awards recognise ‘the most creative and influential innovations from around the world that have advanced the state of robotics’, according to Robotics Business Review.


Companies, research and development organisations and business development awards can apply for an award in the three categories of: business and management innovation; technology, services and research innovation; and, application and market innovation.


The deadline for applications is the 16th of April 2021 and must feature an innovation “that was initiated, released or executed” between the 1st of January and 1st of April this year.


Applications are also open for the 2021 Heart Foundation’s Active Australia Innovation Challenge.


The challenge seeks “innovative community-based projects designed to get Australians moving,” according to the Heart Foundation.

20 winners will receive $10,000 each to develop their project ideas.


The deadline for challenge responses is 5pm on the 26th of April.


Heart Foundation active living director Trevor Shilton said the challenge was important in the context of statistics showing “fewer than half of all adult Australians meet national physical activity guidelines, which means they are not active enough for good heart health.”

Melbourne’s La Trobe University is set to build biology and technology innovation hubs after a funding announcement from the Victorian government.


Researchers will use the hubs to develop anti-viral medication and portable farming methods, according to state minister for higher education Gayle Tierney.


Minister for training and skills, and for higher education Gayle Tierney said, “Projects like the Digital and Bio Innovation Hubs are all about giving Victorians the very best opportunities.”


Please contact me on LinkedIn here for any innovation news that’s caught your eye

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In 2016 I published a blog article titled Moonshots for Australia: 7 For Now. It’s one of many I have posted on business and innovation in Australia. In that book, I highlighted a number of Industries of the Future among a number of proposed Moonshots. I self-published a book, Innovation in Australia – Creating prosperity for future generations, in 2019, with a follow-up COVID edition in 2020. There is no doubt COVID is causing massive disruption. Prior to COVID, there was little conversation about National Sovereignty or supply chains. Even now, these topics are fading, and we remain preoccupied with productivity and jobs! My motivation for this writing has been the absence of a coherent narrative for Australia’s business future. Over the past six years, little has changed. The Australian ‘psyche’ regarding our political and business systems is programmed to avoid taking a long-term perspective. The short-term nature of Government (3 to 4-year terms), the short-term horizon of the business system (driven by shareholder value), the media culture (infotainment and ‘gotcha’ games), the general Australian population’s cynical perspective and a preoccupation with a lifestyle all create a malaise of strategic thinking and conversation. Ultimately, it leads to a leadership vacuum at all levels. In recent years we have seen the leadership of some of our significant institutions failing to live up to the most basic standards, with Royal Commissions, Inquiries and investigations consuming excessive time and resources. · Catholic Church and other religious bodies · Trade Unions · Banks (and businesses generally, take casinos, for example) · the Australian Defence Force · the Australian cricket teams · our elected representatives and the staff of Parliament House As they say, “A fish rots from the head!” At best, the leadership behaviour in those institutions could be described as unethical and, at worst….just bankrupt! In the last decade, politicians have led us through a game of “leadership by musical chairs” – although, for now, it has stabilised. However, there is still an absence of a coherent narrative about business and wealth creation. It is a challenge. One attempt to provide such a narrative has been the Intergenerational Reports produced by our federal Government every few years since 2002. The shortcomings of the latest Intergenerational Report Each Intergenerational Report examines the long-term sustainability of current government policies and how demographic, technological, and other structural trends may affect the economy and the budget over the next 40 years. The fifth and most recent Intergenerational Report released in 2021 (preceded by Reports in 2002, 2007, 2010 and 2015) provides a narrative about Australia’s future – in essence, it is an extension of the status quo. The Report also highlights three key insights: 1. First, our population is growing slower and ageing faster than expected. 2. The Australian economy will continue to grow, but slower than previously thought. 3. While Australia’s debt is sustainable and low by international standards, the ageing of our population will pressure revenue and expenditure. However, its release came and went with a whimper. The recent Summit on (what was it, Jobs and Skills and productivity?) also seems to have made the difference of a ‘snowflake’ in hell in terms of identifying our long-term challenges and growth industries. Let’s look back to see how we got here and what we can learn. Australia over the last 40 years During Australia’s last period of significant economic reform (the late 1980s and early 1990s), there was a positive attempt at building an inclusive national narrative between Government and business. Multiple documents were published, including: · Australia Reconstructed (1987) – ACTU · Enterprise Bargaining a Better Way of Working (1989) – Business Council of Australia · Innovation in Australia (1991) – Boston Consulting Group · Australia 2010: Creating the Future Australia (1993) – Business Council of Australia · and others. There were workshops, consultations with industry leaders, and conferences across industries to pursue a national microeconomic reform agenda. Remember these concepts? · global competitiveness · benchmarking · best practice · award restructuring and enterprising bargaining · training, management education and multiskilling. This agenda was at the heart of the business conversation. During that time, the Government encouraged high levels of engagement with stakeholders. As a result, I worked with a small group of training professionals to contribute to the debate. Our contribution included events and publications over several years, including What Dawkins, Kelty and Howard All Agree On – Human Resources Strategies for Our Nation (published by the Australian Institute of Training and Development). Unfortunately, these long-term strategic discussions are nowhere near as prevalent among Government and industry today. The 1980s and 1990s were a time of radical change in Australia. It included: · floating the $A · deregulation · award restructuring · lowering/abolishing tariffs · Corporatisation and Commercialisation Ross Garnaut posits that the reforms enabled Australia to lead the developed world in productivity growth – given that it had spent most of the 20th century at the bottom of the developed country league table. However, in his work, The Great Reset, Garnaut says that over the next 20 years, our growth was attributable to the China mining boom, and from there, we settled into “The DOG days” – Australia moved to the back of a slow-moving pack! One unintended consequence of opening our economy to the world is the emasculation of the Australian manufacturing base. The manic pursuit of increased efficiency, lower costs, and shareholder value meant much of the labour-intensive work was outsourced. Manufacturing is now less than 6% of our GDP , less than half of what it was 30 years ago!
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