Newsprint mills in Australia: a story of shifting optimum location

Authors
Citation
M. Bradshaw, Newsprint mills in Australia: a story of shifting optimum location, AUST GEOGR, 32(2), 2001, pp. 241-257
Citations number
44
Categorie Soggetti
EnvirnmentalStudies Geografy & Development
Journal title
AUSTRALIAN GEOGRAPHER
ISSN journal
00049182 → ACNP
Volume
32
Issue
2
Year of publication
2001
Pages
241 - 257
Database
ISI
SICI code
0004-9182(200107)32:2<241:NMIAAS>2.0.ZU;2-A
Abstract
The focus in this paper is on the shifting optimum location for a newsprint mill in Australia, factors influencing this shift, and the implications fo r a particular manufacturing site that is becoming increasingly outdated an d out-of-place. Shipping times and schedules for high-volume, high-density tonnages of commodities such as newsprint have altered insufficiently over the last 60 years to affect competitive relations among various newsprint m anufacturers around the world. With sea transport held roughly constant, ch anges in other aspects of the international newsprint industry can be inves tigated as part of unpacking the concept of globalisation. Globalisation fo r the former Australian Newsprint Mills Ltd meant becoming more open to new and closer competition, as well as becoming more exposed to acquisition by increasingly transnational enterprises. In the global newsprint industry a t least, the world is less a smaller place than a more open one, with tonne s of newsprint moving at similar speeds to 60 years ago but among different and changing locations in terms of geography, ownership and market prefere nce.