Ergon workers the Superheroes of Julia Creek – Bob Katter
Dear Editor,
The absolute imperative for the Copperstring transmission line was demonstrated yet again this week.
Some 3,000 people came to the Dirt N Dust festival, one of the biggest events in north west Queensland.
Australia’s top rodeo riders and adventure athletes compete here, but on Friday night the power supply was cut off.
One little strand of wire with hardly enough power to carry the western grid, it snaps or has a hiccup, and the lights go out.

If you don’t care about the people that provide you with your biggest source of income - the mining industry - and if you don’t care about the fifth biggest industry, cattle, and the people that make the money to pay for your hospitals, then know this, if you keep treating these industries like dirt, then you will have no industries.
The North West Minerals Province produces $8,000 million in export earnings every year.
It represents a significant proportion of Australia’s entire export earnings and yet it is mostly powered off a little, tiny gas fired power station.
Thanks to the State and Federal Governments, we sold all our gas for 6c a unit and now we Australians have to buy it back for $16 a unit.
So, it is fuelled on the most expensive fuel in the world, Australian gas, small, with no economies of scale.
And that is what’s propping up $8,000 million in exports.
We have seen a staggering $200 million loss in value in one mine alone due to intermittent power problems. And the privatisation of the railways was costing tens of millions of dollars every year because under privatisation, the necessary repairs and upgrades simply don’t happen.
So, the tiny, little Ergon workforce that are left after the state government sacked 2,500 workers, are the superheroes who soldiered on all night, through the night, and did everything humanly possible to get the lights back on.
Thanks fellas.
Bob Katter MP.









