I want to talk to you about universities as sources of economic and social renewal and hope. Also, the very important role that you鈥攅mployers and industry鈥攑lay in helping us to prepare people for a first, second or tenth job.
Let’s go back almost a decade. In a former life, I worked for the then Federal Minister for Innovation, Industry Science and Research. It was the height of the Global Financial Crisis, and much of the work was aimed at trying to keep car making in Australia. Mitsubishi was already gone but serious headway was being made with Holden, Ford and Toyota.
The peak of these efforts came three days before Christmas, 2008.
The Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, Premier Mike Rann, and Holden Managing Director Mark Reuss came together at Holden鈥檚 Elizabeth plant to make a huge announcement.
Holden was to add a second line to its Adelaide operation, a new fuel efficient 4-cylinder car, the first small car for Holden in Australia, alongside the iconic commodore.
There was money from the State and the Federal Government. The media reported it as an early Christmas present for the more than 3,400 workers at Elizabeth鈥攁nd possibly a new dawn for Australian car making.
The plant was shut down for the event鈥攁nd it seemed like all the workers and their families were there to hear the news.
Kevin Rudd was mobbed as he moved through the crowd after the speeches.
When all the hoopla died down and the politicians had gone, I went out the back to have a sausage in bread.
I lined up behind a middle-aged bloke who had spent his whole working life at the plant. He was very polite and he introduced me to his son, who was a Holden worker as well, and his grandson who was tiny, but covered from head to foot in Holden racing team red.
I asked him what he thought of the whole thing. He paused and thenhe said was glad to hear his job was safe鈥攆or now鈥攂ut that he had seen this kind of thing come and go.
I didn鈥檛 know what to say.
He knew it was all over.
And in the end he was right鈥攖he package worked for a while. The first 4-cylinder Holden Cruze rolled off Elizabeth鈥檚 production line in 2010 and the last in 2016.
Halfway through the run, Holden announced they would cease manufacturing in Australia, and did so last聽year.
So what do we do when economic circumstances, global shifts, evolving technology, mean that everything聽is changing around us? Where do we look for certainty, for renewal, for hope?
Well let鈥檚 look at what happened here on the ground. Not in theory but the reality.
For a long view, we need to look to the old Mitsubishi factory in Tonsley Park鈥攊t has been transformed by聽the South Australian Government, Flinders University and industry into Australia鈥檚 first innovation district.
The park is now home to more than 70 businesses, from startups to giants like Siemens. It is expected to聽attract $1 billion in private investment and is trialling driverless car pods for the Asia-Pacific market鈥攚hich聽could be manufactured here as soon as 2020.
Tonsley Park is also working on industry 4.0, the so called 鈥渇ourth industrial revolution鈥.
This next-generation advanced manufacturing is driven by automation and data, and a world in which the聽cyber and the human work hand-in-hand to create the parts and products that shape our everyday lives.
Over at the University of Adelaide, renewal comes in many forms but there鈥檚 ThincLab. sitting across three聽sites, it brings together students, researchers and entrepreneurs. Just one of the projects is Firma group鈥檚聽mobile apps to detect melanomas.
Then there鈥檚 the partnership between UniSA and Precision Components to create the world鈥檚 first fully聽plastic automotive mirrors, and beyond that mirrors that turn sunshine into power.
These are the same people who are building environmentally friendly buses, and, back to where we聽started, they will work with race car manufacturer, Brabham, to build a new supercar at one of the former聽Holden sites.
They will build 70 cars; they will sell for $1.8 million鈥攅ach.
These are all examples of transformation, universities and industry working with communities to revitalise聽economies and communities. To restore hope.
On the state-wide scale we can clearly see how important universities are to the economy.
- International students bring 1.2 billion to the economy here, third behind wine and minerals;
- Nationally they bring $32 billion into our economy each year, and supports 130,000 jobs;
- More than 5% of SA鈥檚 GDP comes from education: schools, VET and unis. This is higher than聽the national figure;
- Just walk around town and you can see all the recent building projects which have helped聽sustain 4000 jobs; and
- Nationally universities add $140 billion to the economy each year and spend over 10 billion on聽research and development.
But universities just don鈥檛 drive economic and industrial renewal. They transform the lives of individuals every day.
Last year we went to Whyalla to meet Chris Mills, one of David Lloyd鈥檚 students. He had spent 13 years on聽shift work at the Whyalla steelworks and it almost broke him.
Now he鈥檚 studying social work and things are looking up, but聽.
We talked to Chris to illustrate the value of education as part of the UA campaign against cuts to student聽places that are making it so much harder for everyone who has the aptitude and the application to study at聽university.
But that isn鈥檛 what stays with me. It鈥檚 Chris himself. It鈥檚 the growing smile of a young man, with pride in聽himself and hope for his future.
Working with you, with communities and employers, that鈥檚 what universities can do. That鈥檚 what we can聽unleash鈥攅very bit of spectacular South Australian talent.