词条 | WestConnex |
释义 |
| road_name = WestConnex | state = nsw | uc_former = under construction | type = motorway | logo = WestConnex Logo.png | logo_upright = 0.9 | image = | caption = | length = 33 | direction_a = North West | direction_b = South West | end_a = {{plainlist|
}} | end_b = {{plainlist|
}} | est = 2017 (M4 Widening & King Georges Road Interchange Upgrade) 2019 (M4 East) 2020 (New M5) 2022 (M4–M5 Link Main Tunnels) 2023 ({{NSWcity|Rozelle}} Interchange, Iron Cove Link & Sydney Gateway) | through = | route = | exits = {{plainlist|
}} }}WestConnex is a {{convert|33|km|adj=on}} predominately underground motorway scheme currently under construction in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. The motorway scheme, a joint project of the New South Wales and Australian governments, encompasses widening and extension of the M4 Western Motorway (M4), a new section for the M5 Motorway (M5), and a new inner western bypass of the Sydney CBD connecting the M4 and M5. Together, these projects will create around {{convert|16|km}} of new tunnels. In addition, {{convert|7.5|km}} of the existing M4 will be widened and converted to a private tollway. To help fund the project, the publicly-owned M5 East Motorway (M5 East) will be converted to a private tollway, while the toll on the existing M5 will be extended for a further 34 years.[1] The initial M4 widening and King Georges Road Interchange Upgrades began construction in 2015 and were completed in 2017; the M4 East and New M5 tunnel stages started work in mid-2016 and are due for completion in 2019 and 2020 respectively; and the final stages, the M4–M5 link, the Iron Cove Link and the Sydney Gateway are expected to be constructed between 2019 and 2023.[1] The forecast cost of WestConnex has grown from {{AUD}}10 billion[2] to over $18.6 billion.[2] Once land acquisitions,[5] network extensions development costs and the cost of operations[6] are accounted for, the total cost is forecast to be at least $20 billion and possibly more than $45 billion.[7] The NSW Government has announced its intention to sell at least 51 per cent of WestConnex; estimated by UBS to yield between $2 billion and $4 billion.[8] The project has bipartisan political support from the coalition and Labor parties, at both a federal and state level.[9][10][11][12] Described as "the biggest transport project in Sydney and Australia since the Harbour Bridge"[3] and costing "in current dollars, double the Snowy River scheme", the project has been widely criticised on economic, social and process grounds[4] and has been the subject of escalating public protest.[5] It has faced intense opposition from residents, pro-public transport groups, anti-toll groups, and councillors from impacted suburbs, including the Lord Mayor of Sydney Clover Moore, and the Greens. In June 2017, the City of Sydney called on the government to abandon the third and final stage of the project.[6] HistoryThe first comprehensive plan for Sydney motorways, the Cumberland County Plan, was released by the then county council in 1948 and adopted in 1951 by the NSW Government. The Plan envisaged a radial motorway network centred on Sydney's CBD. Though construction of the roads progressed slowly – by 1971 only isolated sections were complete – the Plan ensured corridors were reserved, providing property owners with certainty about future infrastructure.[7] This changed in 1976 with the election of the Australian Labor Party under Premier Neville Wran. Wran, faced with his predecessors' ambitious infrastructure plans, inner-city opposition to motorway projects (including a powerful 'Green Bans' movement) and a deteriorating financial situation, halted work on inner-city projects, scaled back the under-construction Eastern Suburbs railway line and eliminated a number of the Cumberland Plan's inner-city road reservations. Though Wran's decision to sell off the M4 East corridor was later criticised,[8] the Cumberland Plan's radial concept was anyway beginning to lose relevance. The city's passenger and freight gateway had shifted {{convert|14|km}} south of the CBD, with long-distance passengers increasingly arriving via Sydney Airport, not Circular Quay or Central Station; and Port Botany increasingly supplanting Sydney Harbour as the city's main shipping hub. At the same time, employment was decentralising. Retailers were clustering in new suburban shopping malls; factories were moving to less constrained greenfield sites in the outer suburbs; and many companies were moving to suburban campus-style office parks.[7] In 1987, the then Department of Main Roads released Roads 2000, which shifted the focus of motorway planning from completing the CBD-centric radial system and addressed the growing number of cross-suburban vehicle journeys instead.[9] The Western Motorway, now known as the M4, was completed from {{NSWcity|Lapstone}} to Concord in 1992. The South-Western motorway, known as the M5, reached from Prestons to Beverly Hills by 1995.[10] The unfinished M5 East section of the orbital, between Beverly Hills and the airport, remained contentious. Although a surface corridor had been reserved for much of the route, the government of Bob Carr was anxious to minimise the surface impact. After last-minute revisions to the design, the resulting motorway, opened in 2001, was too steep for laden trucks returning from Port Botany, significantly increasing vehicle emissions and frequently overwhelming the ventilation system.[11] Options for the M4 East were exhibited in 2003, but the government was divided over the proposal and ultimately did not proceed with it.[12] "First things first" strategyElected in 2011 on a promise to create an integrated transport strategy for the city, the Liberal-led government of Premier Barry O'Farrell established an independent advisory body, led by former premier Nick Greiner, to assess projects and determine priorities. Greiner's Infrastructure NSW (iNSW) evaluated a number of long-standing motorway proposals, including the M4 East, the F6 extension and the M2-F3 link. iNSW released its strategy, entitled First Things First, the following year. The plan identified a {{convert|33|km|adj=on}} motorway, which it named "WestConnex", as the state's top road priority. The creation of WestConnex was one of the major points of agreement between two competing strategic transport reports, commissioned simultaneously in 2011 by the NSW Government, from iNSW and Transport for NSW.[13] O'Farrell accepted the recommendation, committing $1.8 billion to begin work. The initial scheme called for:
The M4 South component would provide the first step towards an inner-city bypass. Transport for New South Wales, which released its long-term integrated transport plan around the same time, committed to further planning work on the northern section of the bypass. iNSW estimated the benefit-cost ratio for WestConnex at "more than 1.5", noting that the removal of freight traffic from Parramatta Road could also facilitate urban regeneration along the Inner West's main road link.[14] Focused as it was on journeys to and from the international gateways at Botany Bay, the scheme did not include a direct connection to the CBD. This proved a stumbling block in securing federal funding for the project, despite the risk of a motorway direct to the city competing with existing public transport services.[15][16] With a change of government in 2013, the federal government's opposition was reversed.[17] Later modificationsThe scheme underwent a number of changes from the concept recommended by iNSW in 2012. In particular, the government realigned the proposed M4 South to accommodate a link to a future second harbour road tunnel, with a view to one day completing an inner-city bypass.[18] This would mean a large interchange at the site of the abandoned Rozelle Rail Yards close to the Anzac Bridge.[19] This interchange was later moved underground.[19] A tunnel under {{NSWcity|Rozelle}} was added to bypass the congested Victoria Road corridor and connect with the Rozelle Rail Yard interchange.[19] A large park will be built above the interchange.[19] Stub tunnels have also been added as part of Stage 2 to connect to a proposed Southern Motorway to the St George and Sutherland Shire areas.[20][21] ObjectivesThe strategic objectives that the scheme was originally conceived to address have never been made public. The initial application for federal funding was made under the 'National Freight Network' category,[22] and the new tunnels converge near Sydney's main container port (Port Botany) and airport. This suggests the primary objective was to improve road freight productivity. However, smaller truck-only toll tunnels would not have been financially viable. Therefore, general use toll tunnels were proposed instead, to generate toll revenue from passenger vehicles as well.[23] This approach was described as "suburban motorists ... paying for an inner-city freight project".[24] A list of objectives was included in the 2015 Business Case.[25] However, the Business Case and list of objectives were written retrospectively, long after state and federal funding for the project was announced. Infrastructure Australia criticised the NSW Government for not adequately appraising alternative ways of meeting the project objectives.[26] For example, road freight productivity could be improved, and congestion reduced, simply by tolling the existing M4 and M5 motorways, which is being done anyway to cross-subsidise to the new tunnels.[24]StagingStage 1: M4 Widening, King Georges Road Interchange and M4 East{{main article|M4 Western Motorway}}This stage includes widening of the existing M4 from two or three to four lanes in each direction between Parramatta and Homebush Bay Drive; upgrading the existing M5 interchange at King Georges Road; and the M4 East, new twin three-lane motorway tunnels between Homebush and Haberfield. The latter project, being delivered by a Leighton Samsung John Holland joint venture, will connect the M4 to the CBD via the City West Link Road, Anzac Bridge and Western Distributor. The entirety of stage 1 is expected to open to traffic in 2019 and is also linked to an urban renewal program for the Parramatta Road corridor, being managed by UrbanGrowth NSW. {{cite_needed|date=September 2018}} Stage 2: New M5 and St Peters Interchange{{main article|M5 Motorway (Sydney)#New M5 (WestConnex)|l1=New M5}}Stage 2 consists of building the "New M5", a new set of tunnels between the M5 at Beverly Hills and St Peters. Stage 2 will be designed to allow for future connection to the Sydney–Wollongong motorway which connects to Waterfall. Stage 2 originally included the Sydney Gateway, but this has been descoped from the WestConnex project and will be delivered by RMS as a standalone project. In January 2016, the Wolli Creek Preservation Society raised concerns that complying offsets are unlikely to be available for the irreparable damage to the Beverly Grove bushland from the temporary use of {{convert|1.4|ha|acre}} as a construction compound. The {{convert|1.87|ha|acre|adj=on}} Beverly Grove bushland was one of the larger remnant patches of the Cooks River/Castlereagh Ironbark ecological community (CCRIF). Further, the {{convert|1.4|ha}} of critically endangered CCRIF cleared was an offset from the original M5 East.[27] On 11 July 2016, the Second Turnbull Ministry announced the environmental approval for Stage 2 of the WestConnex motorway with a captive breeding plan and construction and maintenance of additional habitat for the green and golden bell frog and offsets for damage to the critically endangered CCRIF.[28][29] Stage 3: M4–M5 Link, Iron Cove Link, Rozelle Interchange and Sydney GatewayAlthough still in the early stages of planning, WestConnex's third stage was officially approved in April 2018.[30] It will consist of a new motorway tunnel between a yet to be designed portal at Haberfield and the St Peters Interchange. It will connect the M4, and the M5, with direct connections to the Anzac Bridge and provision for a future Western Harbour Tunnel. A late addition, publicised in July 2016, includes a {{convert|1|km}} tunnel from the Iron Cove Bridge to the still being planned interchange at the Rozelle rail yards, to bypass the congested Victoria Road corridor.[19][31] Stage 3 would also form the southern section of an eventual Inner West bypass of Sydney's CBD. This stage was also to involve the construction of the Sydney Gateway, a mooted high capacity link that is supposed to link the New M5 and M4–M5 Link at St Peters to the northern end of Sydney Airport. Planning on Sydney Gateway began in 2015. As of 2018, the route still has not yet been selected.[32] Major construction is required to begin by 2019 for the road to be completed on schedule in 2023. On 9 November 2016, a new route for the M4-M5 Link took it under Annandale and the Hunter Baillie Memorial Presbyterian Church.[33][34] On 17 November it was confirmed that the mid-tunnel point would be in "the ‘triangle area’ bordered by Parramatta Road, Pyrmont Bridge Road and Mallet Street"[35] BenefitsThe 2015 business case predicted WestConnex will deliver $22.2 billion in benefits, before deducting operating expenses. These benefits are mostly non-cash. They are estimates of the value to users of such things as travel time saved ($12.9 billion) and increased travel time reliability ($1.47 billion) as well as reduced operating costs ($6.18 billion). All other factors are estimated to have a worth of $1.65 billion.[53] The 2015 business case[53] estimated that building WestConnex will enable an extra 45,000 road trips per weekday by 2031. By 2031, Infrastructure Australia estimates that the population of Sydney will have grown by an extra 1.2 million people.[36] For the purpose of calculating benefits and costs of the scheme, tolling is considered to be "a transfer payment from the user to operator", the benefit to the operator is considered to cancel out the disbenefit to the user, and as such, tolling has a "neutral effect on overall benefits and costs".[37] Community feedbackSupportWestConnex has the ongoing[38] support of the New South Wales Government, currently led by Premier Gladys Berejiklian of the New South Wales Liberal Party and the Australian Federal Government, currently led by Prime Minister Scott Morrison of the Australian Liberal Party. Both levels of government have continually funded the planning and implementation of the WestConnex.[39] NSW Labor former leaders Luke Foley and Michael Daley[40] and current Federal Labor leader Bill Shorten[41] have both voiced support of the project. Labor's federal transport and infrastructure spokesperson, Anthony Albanese, also previously the Minister for Infrastructure and Transport, voiced his support of the project and announced over $1.2 billion in funding despite the motorway impacting on residents in his electorate of Grayndler.[42]WestConnex has also received support from multiple third party organisations, such as the motoring lobby group the NRMA, which argued that it would help improve transport in Sydney's west,[43] significantly reduce travel times and complete a plan from 1947.[44] On 3 October 2012, press releases in support of the "missing motorway" were issued by Infrastructure Partnerships Australia,[45] Sydney Business Chamber,[46] and the Sydney Airport Corporation.[47] Lucy Turnbull {{post-nominals|country=AUS|AO}}, the chief commissioner of the Greater Sydney Commission and wife of former Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, voiced her support for the project albeit with concerns for the preservation of heritage sites in Haberfield, stating that the development needs to "strike the right balance between protecting our homes and heritage and building a Greater Sydney that will work well for future generations".[48] OppositionElements of the WestConnex scheme encountered strident opposition from a range of stakeholders, among them academics, architects, resident action groups,[49][50][51] an industry group, local councils,[52] a developer lobby, the Greens,[53] with some strongly opposed to the project in its entirety.[54] Among the project's most high-profile opponents has been Sydney Lord Mayor Clover Moore, who commissioned a report to Council on the project.[55] Almost 12,900 submissions were lodged with NSW Planning in response to the environmental impact statement, many highly critical of the project.[56] Marrickville Council told WestConnex it will not approve preliminary work until the project as a whole is approved,[57] but observers note that the "scope of the project ... continues to expand",[58] as does the cost.[59][60] Public transportThe Lord Mayor's report, released a month before the 2015 state election, criticised the project and recommended that a new railway line be built along the M4 Western Motorway and M4 East corridor instead, to parallel the existing Inner West Line.[61] The impact of the project on public transport continued to be a matter of concern into 2016 with "no detail on what sort of public transport will be included on the road surface"[62] and repeatedly expressed concerns that experience with motorways shows they generate traffic and increase congestion[5] and that Westconnex will similarly add to congestion, rather than relieving it.[58] The project is criticised as a "crude 1950s response to our complex 21st century transport needs".[63] Planning and approval processesThe planning and approval process for Stage 1A of the scheme (widening the M4) was criticised by Grant Hehir, the NSW Auditor-General, for failing to abide by the Government's own assurance arrangements for major projects. While Hehir made clear it was not his intention to assess the merit or value of the project per se, he identified "a number of deficiencies in governance and independent assurance over the early stages" and made recommendations for change.[64] In response to Hehir's recommendations, the RMS only committed to addressing them for "future more complex stages", leaving the governance arrangements for the current stages unaltered.[65][66] The methods by which the project's value, its cost and benefits as well as the fairness of their distribution have all been challenged.[4] In particular, it is argued that the projections of the economic benefits brought by the project use modelling "...devised by highway agencies in the 1960s to justify the massive cost of urban motorways".[67] The government, although "urged" to consider the fairness of the process of compulsory acquisition for the land required for the project and act on recommendations in a legal report to improve it, decided to take "no further action".[68][69] Environmental impactsThe project has been criticised for its potential impact on the green and golden bell frog at Kogarah golf club.[70] Protests have been strong against the felling of mature heritage trees in preparation for "the 40-hectare spaghetti interchange - as big as Sydney Park itself".[63][71][72] Heritage impactsThe destruction of heritage properties in Haberfield, a suburb listed in its entirety as a Conservation area, has been the subject of specific criticism, especially when the chair of the Greater Sydney Commission said she was unaware of it.[73][74] The compulsorily acquisition of residential properties in inner-city suburbs for the project, including "at least 50 listed heritage buildings"[5][75] has been the subject of much criticism and opposition on grounds of disruption, loss of heritage and unfairness of process, including the Government's decision to release only the executive summary of the project's business case.[76][77] SecrecyAfter the WestConnex Authority was closed in October 2015, the project's transfer to the Sydney Motorway Corporation was criticised on the basis that this there were then no representatives from transport agencies on the board of the new "private corporation" and also that information about the project would no longer need to be disclosed in the same way that government entities normally did.[78] A proposal in 2016 for an additional tunnel between Iron Cove Bridge and an interchange at Rozelle, required the acquisition of further residential properties. Residents whose homes were affected reportedly received letters about such acquisitions on the same day that the responsible Government Minister said final decisions on them "had yet to be made".[58] The Russell Review of the acquisition system in 2012 had not been released by 2016.[60] FundingFunding uses a combination of government subsidy, tolls on new tunnel sections, and tolls on some existing motorways (M4, M5 East and M5 South-West).[79] The finance was to mostly be loans from the private sector, with $2 to $3 billion worth of loans and grants from the State and Federal Governments.[80] All loans are to be repaid by privatising each section as it is completed.[76] TollsThe Government's tolling strategy is based on distance-based charging. Tolling on new sections of WestConnex (the M4 East, the New M5 and the M4-M5 Link) will begin as each section opens. Tolling on the existing M4 (widened section between Parramatta and Homebush) began in August 2017.[81] Tolling on the existing M5 East will begin in 2020.[81] Tolling (by WestConnex) on the M5 South-West will begin in 2026, when the current concession was due to end.[81] Tolling will continue until 2060.[82] Once tolling on a section starts, the charge will consist of a flagfall plus a charge per kilometre, with a maximum charge, calculated as follows.[83]
For each elapsed year between 2012 and 2040, the Theoretical Toll will increase by 4.16% or by CPI, whichever is higher. From 2041 onwards, the Theoretical Toll will increase by 4.00% or by CPI, whichever is higher.[81] And:
The new tolls that will be charged on existing motorways will be as follows:
The tolls for the existing M4 and M5 East will be included in the WestConnex toll cap. The toll for the M5 South-West will not be included in the WestConnex toll cap, meaning the toll on the M5 (as a whole) is set to reach $13.50 in 2026.[81] The opposition Labor Party has called on the Government to end the toll on the M5 South West Motorway after 2026, when the road will have been paid for.[85] The NSW Government has not yet said if it will end the toll, or if it will extend the M5 South-West cashback scheme, which currently expires in 2026.[86] FinanceBy 2015, $1.5 billion has been raised from the private sector.[87] $7.1 billion has been provided by the State and Federal governments. The Federal government has contributed a grant of $1.5 billion, and committed to a concessional loan of $2.0 billion. The NSW Government initially planned to contribute $1.8 billion. It has since increased its contribution to $3.6 billion, of which $1.8 billion is from the 'Restart NSW' infrastructure fund and $1.8 billion is from the State's Consolidated Fund.[88] In August 2018, a consortium led by Transurban won the bidding to buy 51% of WestConnex for 9.3 billion. NSW Treasurer Dominic Perrottet said that 5.3 billion of that would be spent on delivering Stage 3. [89] The Transurban consortium will contribute another 0.7 billion towards the cost of Stage 3, and the remainder of the cost is to be funded by borrowing.[123] By the end of State 3, the project is expected to be carrying $8.2 billion of debt.[90] In 2013 Julia Gillard, Prime Minister at the time, offered a grant of $1.8 billion which was rejected by then Premier O'Farrell, as a "stunt",[16] because it came with three conditions[91] not reimposing tolls on the existing M4 motorway even if it were widened; a direct connection to the Sydney city centre; and a direct connection to Port Botany. In particular, not tolling existing roads was not acceptable as it would deny the project billions of dollars in toll revenue. Following a change of federal government, incoming Prime Minister Tony Abbott approved a grant of $1.5 billion, followed by a loan of $2.0 billion.[92] CostsWhen first proposed in 2012, the WestConnex was to cost approximately $10 billion, including property acquisition and construction.[80] By 2015, construction costs were forecast to be $16.8 billion, including $800 million for the Airport Gateway. [21] In August 2017, Premier Berejiklian announced that cost was $16.8 billion, not including the Airport Gateway. The cost of the Gateway had by then grown to $1.8 billion.[93][94] The $16.8 billion figure does not include "land acquisition, network extensions, and development costs",[21] or indirect costs such as alleged environmental damage{{citation needed|date=October 2016}} and shortfalls between prices being paid for compulsory acquisitions and market values.[95] Land acquisition costs are known to be at least $1.5 billion.[96] The cost of network extensions to support the WestConnex has never formally been disclosed and neither has the cost or nature of 'development costs'.[21] Operating costs have been estimated at the equivalent of $1.465 billion.[76] Leaked documents show that contractors have lodged over $1 billion in claims for variations to contracts.[97] According to a report commissioned by the City of Sydney, once excluded factors are properly considered, the full cost of the project may be more than $45 billion.[98] SaleUnder the original financing strategy the NSW was to retain ownership of WestConnex until 2025, so as to maximise the sales price.[21] On 12 May 2017 the NSW State Government announced its intention to sell at least 51% of Sydney Motorway Corporation, the holding company for the WestConnex project. UBS estimated that the 51% stake might fetch between $2 billion and $4 billion.[99] In August 2018, the 51% stake was sold to Sydney Transport Partners, a consortium led by Transurban.[100] The NSW government retains the other 49%. GovernanceAuditsIn May 2016, it was announced that the Federal Government decision to commit $3.5 billion to WestConnex project will be investigated by the Commonwealth Auditor-General.[101] Grant Hehir, the Auditor-General, released his report on 14 February 2017[102] and was highly critical of upfront payments made by the Gillard and Abbott governments and an {{AUD}}2 billion loan made in advance of scheduled milestones "did not adequately protect the Australian government's financial interests". The estimated cost to the Commonwealth Government of providing funding before it was needed was $20 million.[103][104][105][106] Paul Fletcher, the federal Minister for Urban Affairs and Cities, claimed that the report was not critical of the project:[107] {{block quote|Nothing in this report raises any questions about WestConnex’s design, the construction program, or the benefits that WestConnex will deliver to millions of people in western and southwestern Sydney—such as cutting travel time from Parramatta to Sydney Airport by 40 minutes.|Paul Fletcher, Minister for Urban Affairs and Cities, 2017.}}In 2014, the NSW Auditor-General, Grant Hehir at the time, conducted a performance assurance audit covering the period from the development of the concept in October 2012 through to the pre-tender phase for Stage 1 in March 2014 and concluded that:[108] {{blockquote|In the period covered by this audit, the processes applied to WestConnex to provide independent assurance to [NSW] Government did not meet best practice standards. The agencies concerned adopted a number of good practice internal governance and assurance arrangements for WestConnex. However, the Government would have received greater assurance about the risks, costs and benefits of the project had these agencies devoted time and effort to also implementing the Major Projects Assurance Framework effectively as designed.|Grant Hehir, NSW Auditor-General, 18 December 2014.}}In October 2017 it was reported that Margaret Crawford, the NSW Auditor-General, will conduct another audit of the WestConnex project. However, the scope and timeline of the audit was unclear.[109] Public Accountability Committee InquiryThe NSW Legislative Council Public Accountability Committee established an Inquiry into the Impacts of Westconnex on 21 June 2018. [https://www.parliament.nsw.gov.au/committees/inquiries/Pages/inquiry-details.aspx?pk=2497 Parliament of NSW, Impact of the WestConnex project] FindingsOn 17 December 2018 the Inquiry released its report which included the following findings [110]:
ResponsibilityThe WestConnex Delivery Authority (WDA) was a NSW Government agency established in November 2013 to plan and manage delivery of the WestConnex motorway scheme. WDA's functions had previously been performed by a project office within Roads and Maritime Services.[111] WDA was established by the Transport Administration (General) Amendment (WestConnex Delivery Authority) Regulation 2013. Its founding chairman was businessman Tony Shepherd and its founding chief executive was Dennis Cliche. The Authority was merged into the Sydney Motorway Corporation in October 2015 with the Corporation responsible for all aspects of the project. Following the resignation of Shepherd, Peter Brecht became chair, with claims that information about the project is less available to the public since Brecht's appointment.[78] See also{{stack|{{portal|Australian roads|Sydney}}}}
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of WestConnex property acquisitions set to exceed $1.5b|first=Sean|last=Nicholls|date=16 September 2016|access-date=8 October 2016|work=The Sydney Morning Herald |url=http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/cost-of-westconnex-property-acquisitions-set-to-exceed-15b-20160914-grg2zc.html}} 97. ^{{cite news|first=Michell|last=Brown|date=3 July 2017|work=ABC News|title=WestConnex contractors seeking $1b in compensation, according to documents leaked to Labor|url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-07-03/westconnex-contractors-seeking-one-billion-compensation/8673016}} 98. ^1 {{cite news|last=Saulwick|first=Jacob|title=New motorways and road upgrades take WestConnex bill beyond $45 billion: council|url=http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/new-motorways-and-road-upgrades-take-westconnex-bill-beyond-40-billion-council-20170414-gvl1pe.html|work=The Sydney Morning Herald}} 99. ^1 {{cite news|last=Stewart|first=Robb|work=Fox Business|url=http://www.foxbusiness.com/features/2017/05/12/new-south-wales-seeks-buyer-for-westconnex-toll-road.html|date=12 May 2017|title=New South Wales Seeks Buyer for WestConnex Toll Road}} 100. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.westconnex.com.au/sydney-motorway-corporation|title=Sydney Motorway Corporation|website=WestConnex|accessdate=6 December 2018}} 101. ^{{cite news |last=Bullen|first=James|date=19 May 2016|title=WestConnex funding to be scrutinised by auditor-general after Anthony Albanese, Senate requests|url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-05-19/westconnex-billions-to-be-audited-albanese-questions-funding/7427150|access-date=6 October 2016|work=ABC News|location=Australia}} 102. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.anao.gov.au/work/performance-audit/approval-and-administration-commonwealth-funding-westconnex-project|title=The Approval and Administration of Commonwealth Funding for the WestConnex Project|publisher=Australian National Audit Office|date=14 February 2017}} 103. ^{{cite news|url=https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/audit-office-highly-critical-of-government-funding-for-westconnex-20170214-guc9dr.html|title=Audit office highly critical of government funding for WestConnex|author=O'Sullivan, Matt|date=14 February 2017|access-date=1 June 2018|work=The Sydney Morning Herald}} 104. ^{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2017/feb/14/canberra-gave-westconnex-35bn-without-proper-assessment-audit-finds|title=Canberra gave WestConnex $3.5bn without proper assessment, audit finds|author1=Knaus, Christopher|author2=Karp, Paul|date=14 February 2017|access-date=1 June 2018|work=Guardian Australia}} 105. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-02-14/westconnex-funding-was-not-properly-assessed-report/8270134|title=WestConnex: Audit finds project was not properly assessed for Federal funding|author=Hawke, Sarah|date=14 February 2017|access-date=1 June 2018|work=ABC News|location=Australia}} 106. ^{{cite news|url=https://theconversation.com/westconnex-audit-offers-another-17b-lesson-in-how-not-to-fund-infrastructure-73206|title=WestConnex audit offers another $17b lesson in how not to fund infrastructure|author1=Terrill, Marion|author2=Danks, Lucille|date=21 February 2017|access-date=1 June 2018|work=The Conversation|location=Australia}} 107. ^{{cite press release|url=http://minister.infrastructure.gov.au/pf/releases/2017/February/pf002_2017.aspx|title=WestConnex Audit Report Makes No Criticisms of the Project|author1=Fletcher, Paul|author-link=Paul Fletcher (politician)|date=14 February 2017|access-date=1 June 2018|publisher=Australian Government}} 108. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.audit.nsw.gov.au/ArticleDocuments/351/01_Westconnex_Full_Report.pdf.aspx?Embed=Y|title=WestConnex: Assurance to the Government|publisher=NSW Auditor-General|date=18 December 2014|access-date=1 June 2018|page=3}} 109. ^{{cite news|url=https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/nsw-auditorgeneral-to-inquire-into-westconnex-for-a-second-time-20171012-gyzqvb.html|title=NSW Auditor-General to inquire into WestConnex for a second time|author=O'Sullivan, Matt|date=12 October 2017|access-date=1 June 2018|work=The Sydney Morning Herald}} 110. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.parliament.nsw.gov.au/lcdocs/inquiries/2497/Final%20report%20-%20Impact%20of%20the%20WestConnex%20Project%20-%20FINAL%20-%2014%20December%202018.pdf |publisher=Parliament of New South Wales|date=17 December 2018 | title = "Impact of the WestConnex project Final Report"}} 111. ^{{cite web |title=WestConnex Delivery Authority established |url=http://www.westconnex.com.au/news/media_releases/media_releases_2013/20131031_delivery_authority_established.html |publisher=Roads and Maritime Services |accessdate=4 August 2015 |date=31 October 2013}} External links
2 : Proposed roads in Australia|Highways in Sydney |
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