Central Highlands Development Corporation

Scope: Regional Industry Collaboration

Industry: Mining and Government

In mid 2022, Hughes et al (HEA) were engaged by the Central Highlands Development Corporation (CHDC) on behalf of members of the Central Highlands Resources Roundtable (CHRR) to undertake an investigation into economic opportunities for local content collaboration.

The scope was to deliver an investigative study that focused on collaborative challenges and opportunities in the areas of regional procurement and investment priorities.

10 Collaborating Organisations

3,135 Rows of Data Analysed

“Working with Hughes et al (HEA) was a cooperative exercise that required flexibility, regional context, and an appreciation of the vulnerability of the group to work together.”
— Client Reference

Overview

The Central Highlands (CH) region of Central Queensland (CQ) is one of a handful of regional communities that are very much "at the coal face" of the energy transition. An agricultural community at heart, the Central Highlands also has a long and proud coal mining history, with almost all of the community’s economic sustainability financially underwritten by an industry that already contributes significantly in the form of royalties, taxes, and licencing fees.

CHDC is the lead economic and tourism development agency for the Central Highlands region. As part of their future growth and development strategy, they convened and facilitated a group known as the Central Highlands Resources Roundtable (CHRR).

In mid-2022, the CHRR members committed funds for the procurement of a consultant to undertake an investigation into potential opportunities for increased collaboration through local content that would actively contribute to the sustainability and strategic growth of the region. The outcome of this investigation would be an Options Report that provided the CHRR with findings, recommendations, and actions to pursue in collaboration. HEA was awarded the scope after a competitive tender process.

As part of our initial undertaking, HEA collected and analysed economic investment, procurement, and employment information from primary and secondary sources and created a baseline framework in which the CHRR could also provide input regarding future collaboration opportunities.

Additionally, HEA engaged the CHRR working group through a series of workshops, document releases, and surveys, with three strategic milestone workshops undertaken: project commencement, presentation of initial research findings, and presentation of future growth actions and strategies.

From this, a final options report was handed to CHDC and the CHRR members. The report provided a thorough review of the findings and subsequent recommendations, along with a detailed plan with actionable appendices that identified six strategies and prioritised 54 initiatives for future collaboration.