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Companies

Qantas chief executive Vanessa Hudson.
Opinion
Aviation

Sorry, not sorry: Qantas perfects the art of the non-apology

To suggest that the airline’s settlement over the ghost flights matter makes Qantas a trustworthy company is to be wilfully blind to its recent history.

  • by Joe Aston
Auric Mining’s Jeffreys Find open pit gold mine near Norseman.

New WA gold haul to trigger next Auric cash splash

After pocketing $4.7 million from its savvy Jeffreys Find project in WA’s Goldfields in 2023, Auric Mining is again ready to fill the till with more gold sales.

  • by Michael Philipps
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Opinion & Perspectives

Sorry, not sorry: Qantas perfects the art of the non-apology

To suggest that the airline’s settlement over the ghost flights matter makes Qantas a trustworthy company is to be wilfully blind to its recent history.

Joe Aston
Joe Aston

Columnist

When politicians fire up on ‘security’, my bulldust detector goes to DEFCON 1

Using “security” as a justification for a policy initiative opens the door to interventions that are, in the words of former Treasury secretary Dr Ken Henry, “frankly, bad”.

Ross Gittins
Ross Gittins

Economics Editor

Chalmers’ challenge: Hard-headed budget discipline

Australia’s debt-laden households need the treasurer to keep federal spending in check.

Banking & finance

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Entrepreneurship

The memorial service to celebrate the life of billionaire Lang Walker was held at Sydney Town Hall.

A force of nature with a wry smile: Lang Walker remembered

Billionaire and philanthropist Lang Walker was remembered as a transformative force in Australia’s urban landscape at a memorial service at Sydney Town Hall on Friday.

  • by Colin Kruger and Carolyn Cummins
From left to right: Former Fortescue executives, Bart Kolodziejczyk and Michael Masterman’s start-up Element Zero has plans for a $US2.1 billion green iron processing plant in the Pilbara.

The iron men with a $3 billion plan to save the planet

Two former Fortescue executives want to reduce the enormous carbon footprint of iron ore, Australia’s most lucrative export industry. It’ll cost at least $3 billion.

  • by Anne Hyland

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