![]() From Site Selection magazine, November 2001
WORLD REPORTS: AUSTRALIA
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Brisbane:
Growing Port City Lures Business Down Under
orporate real estate executives seeking a site for Asia-Pacific regional headquarters operations are taking a second look at Brisbane.
The state capital of Queensland on the East Coast of Australia, Brisbane is rapidly joining the ranks of Sydney and Melbourne as a true economic powerhouse in the Land Down Under. Consider these recent gains for the metro area of 1.6 million people:
The Australia TradeCoast is an alliance of the Queensland Government's Department of State Development, the Office of Economic Development for the City of Brisbane, the Port of Brisbane Corp. and the Brisbane Airport Corp. The goal of the alliance is to develop a global investment and trade precinct encompassing Brisbane's international airport and nearby seaport. The approach is paying dividends. In addition to the projects listed above, Brisbane this year attracted significant investments from dry-food manufacturer Kerry Ingredients and international freight forwarders DHL Global Worldwide. In each case, the airport and seaport were pivotal factors. "At Brisbane Airport we enjoy 24-hour, curfew-free airport access, proximity to major arterial roads and the central business district, as well as accessibility to the Asia-Pacific region," says John Pearson, DHL regional director for Oceania. "Due to the success of the relocation and ongoing success of the customer service center in 1996, we decided in 1999 to locate our Oceania Shared Services, covering finance, customs and tele-sales, to Brisbane, increasing staff from 175 to 400." For DHL, which enjoys 40 percent market share of the air express industry worldwide, the move is a strategic one designed to strengthen the company's position in the Asia-Pacific region. "These moves are part of DHL's long-term strategy to make the Australia TradeCoast site the overnight pipeline to and from the rest of the world," says Pearson. Qantas CEO Geoff Dixon says his company conducted a comprehensive site search before choosing Brisbane. He cited ample room for expansion at Brisbane Airport and the assistance offered by the Australia TradeCoast as key factors in relocating the oldest airline in the English-speaking world to Brisbane. Australia TradeCoast Chairman Elizabeth Nosworthy says that companies needing to move goods to market quickly are finding several built-in advantages in relocating to Brisbane. "Queensland is Australia's lowest-cost location for doing business," she says. "From taxation to infrastructure and labor costs, Queensland offers across-the-board competitive strengths when compared to other Australia states and Asia-Pacific countries. Brisbane also offers lower warehousing and distribution costs than other Australian cities. And with increasing congestion in Sydney and Melbourne ports and airports, Brisbane is becoming an attractive logistics hub for southbound cargo to be transported via road or rail along Australia's eastern seaboard."
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