
By Renju Jose
SYDNEY, April 2 (Reuters) - Australia will provide up to A$1 billion ($693 million) in interest-free loans to critical businesses, including transport operators and fertiliser producers, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will say on Thursday, as they grapple with surging fuel costs.
The support package comes as the Iran war disrupts global fuel supplies, driving up prices and fuelling concerns of availability as Australia imports more than 80% of its fuel. Fear of shortages has stoked panic buying in some regions, despite government assurances that the market is well supplied.
"No Government can promise to eliminate the pressures this crisis will impose. But we can be a buffer against the worst of it. A shock absorber, in a time of global shocks," Albanese is set to say in a speech to the National Press Club.
The loans will be offered to businesses considered essential to maintaining critical supply chains, helping them tide over the immediate financial pressure.
Albanese warned in a rare national address on Wednesday that the economic fallout from the war in the Middle East would persist for months, impacting both families and businesses.
In his speech on Thursday he will say the move to provide loans underscores his centre-left Labor government's focus on easing cost-of-living pressures, a priority that will shape next month's federal budget.
"It is our government's most important budget to date - and it will be our most ambitious. It has to be. The scale of the challenge facing us - and the breadth of opportunities ahead of us - demands that ambition and that urgency."
($1 = 1.4438 Australian dollars)
(Reporting by Renju Jose in Sydney; Editing by Sonali Paul)
LATEST POSTS
- 1
the Kinds of Thailand: Decision in favor of Your Number one Thai Dish! - 2
Meet the astronauts about to make history on flight around the moon - 3
Hilary Duff releases 'Mature,' her 1st song in 10 years - 4
Ancient mass grave discovered in water cistern during Tel Azekah excavations - 5
The 10 Most Persuasive Forerunners in Innovation
Building an Individual Brand: Illustrations from Forces to be reckoned with
Some gifted dogs can learn new toy names by eavesdropping on owners
Intriguing Social Unesco World Legacy Locales All over The Planet
Understanding the Rudiments of Tree Administrations
Lula’s former human rights minister formally accused of sexual misconduct
Why some African countries are prone to military takeovers
Artemis II's moonbound toilet is working again to astronauts' relief after overnight fix
Gaza amputees struggle to rebuild lives as the enclave faces shortages of prosthetic limbs
Sarkozy says he owes France 'the truth' as he challenges conviction over alleged Libya funding













