View all our reports
Infrastructure Australia is an independent statutory body with a mandate to prioritise and progress nationally significant infrastructure. We provide independent research and advice to all levels of government as well as investors and owners of infrastructure.
Filter by:
Selected Filters: 2000, 2003, 2008, 2009, 2012, 2014 , Energy, National, National Connectivity , National , Publications
Publications
This assessment brief outlines the Victorian Government's proposal to widen and introduce managed motorways on the M2 road corridor from Melbourne Airport through to the M1. The project will improve travel time and reliability to Melbourne Airport.
Publications
This document contains a list of airport, fossil energy, renewable energy, rail and port sites in Northern Australia.
Publications
Progress and Action is Infrastructure Australia's fourth annual report to the Council of Australian Governments. It presents current opportunities and challenges and recommends reforms in key areas of transport, water, energy and telecommunications. It also contains the infrastructure report card 2011–12 and the 2012 Infrastructure Priority List.
Publications
by reviewing current planning and development approvals processes in all Australian jurisdictions.
Publications
This report discusses Infrastructure Australia's methodology for prioritising key infrastructure projects of national significance and lists the priority projects that Infrastructure Australia has identified as a result of applying this methodology. The report sets out the seven-step analytical framework that Infrastructure Australia uses to guide its decision making on project significance.
Publications
This report outlines how Infrastructure Australia aims to address the key infrastructure challenges facing the nation's transport, water, energy and communications infrastructure.
Publications
This discussion paper examines the benefits of a range of renewable transport technologies such as V2G, PHEVs and Smart Grids. It explains how, when used in combination, they can lead to even greater reductions in fossil fuel consumption and greenhouse gas emissions.