Prime Minister Anthony Albanese would like lithium mined here to be processed for batteries in Australia.
The comments came in a response to a question about China’s desire for approval from Canberra to invest in big mining projects and gain access to lithium at a time of growing demand for the minerals needed for high-tech devices.
“We need to not just dig it up. I want to make sure we use the lithium and nickel and other products we have to make batteries here,” Albanese said.
“That’s part of the vision of protecting our national economy going forward. I think we should be making solar panels here. I think we should be making so many more things here in order to protect our national sovereignty.”
Albanese used an address to the National Press Club on Wednesday to assure Australians he was acting to shore up national security and that this was linked to economic security and the sovereignty of local manufacturing.
He insisted Australia would maintain sovereignty over the nuclear-powered submarines to be built under the AUKUS pact with the United States and the United Kingdom,said he wanted to build up local defence manufacturing and urged the Senate to approve the $15 billion National Reconstruction Fund as a way to encourage local industry.
“Yes,it’s about our sovereign capability,it’s about our defence,” he said of AUKUS and local manufacturing. “But it is also about our industry policy,about our economy,about jobs here.”
The Coalition has rejected the $15 billion industry fund on the grounds it could be a “slush fund” and that it would be better to cut costs for manufacturers instead.