As a region of strategic importance to Tasmania, the TPE is engaged in ongoing research with the West Coast Council and partners, into liveability on Tasmania’s West Coast. The West Coast has hosted key industries for over a century and is likely to experience increased investment in coming years given the energy transition and demand for base metals. At the same time, however, the West Coast is experiencing some major challenges including shortages of key skills and workers.
Our latest research project saw us talking with new arrivals to the West Coast to explore the reasons that prompted them to move there as well as their perceptions of the positives and challenges of living in the region. The report aims to provide an evidence base that can be used to inform the development of creative, place-based, locally-led policies and strategies to improve regional liveability.
Living on Tasmania’s West Coast: Perspectives of new residents, April 2024 (PDF 5.7 MB)
Our previous research featured Census-based demographic and housing stock analysis to uncover phenomena such as population churn, proportion and demographics of arrivals and departures, and numbers of occupied and unoccupied dwellings.
The following are some of our findings:
- The West Coast experiences a high rate of population “churn” – with, for example, almost 40% of residents having lived there for less than five years;
- Families with younger children are leaving the West Coast to access education and other services that they perceive to be unavailable to them; and
- The West Coast has a large number of unoccupied dwellings
Population change and housing needs in Tasmania: a preliminary analysis, August 2023 (PDF 4.5 MB)
In summary, the research so far explores what is happening on the West Coast in terms of population movement and housing issues; now the TPE is focussing on why these patterns are occurring, with the goal of assisting the design of effective policy responses in the future. In early 2024 we will be releasing a report that explores the housing needs and preferences of new arrivals to the West Coast.
Our first tranche of research highlighted the growing dependence on drive-in/drive-out (DIDO) workers on the West Coast. We argued that high occurrences of DIDO workforces can erode the extent to which local communities benefit from and ultimately support these industries. Further, we contended that a long-term collaborative approach to investing in community infrastructure is required to enhance the liveability of the West Coast and the long-term viability of the industries it supports.
The changing nature of employment on Tasmania's West Coast, November 2022 (PDF 4.4 MB)