July 1 - 31, 2026: Issue 656

Major platforms have the tools to stop sexual extortion, but they’re not using them – new report

Young man in bed looking at smartphone with a worried expression.
Constantinis/Getty Images
Joel Scanlan, University of Tasmania

It begins with a follow request. An 18-year-old male accepts one on Instagram from an attractive female stranger. She likes his posts, messages him first, friendly, flattering, quick to move the chat to a messaging app.

Within an hour she has shared an intimate image and asked for one in return. The moment he sends it, the flirtation stops: pay, or his image goes to his mother and every friend the blackmailer has found on his profile. A countdown begins.

This is a fictional scenario, but in 2025 the eSafety Commissioner received more than 3,300 reports of sexual extortion or “sextortion”. The vast majority of reports were made by male victims.

A national survey by the Australian Institute of Criminology found more than one in ten Australian adolescents have experienced sexual extortion, over half of them before they’d turned 16. Two in five were targeted with digitally manipulated material, and two-thirds by someone they had only ever met online.

In addition, new national research published last week found that among young people who had sexual images shared without consent, one in four said AI was involved.

eSafety’s latest transparency report, released today, draws on answers platforms must provide under Australia’s Online Safety Act. It reveals many platforms are still not using available tools to detect this crime. Yet sexual extortion is arguably the most predictable serious crime on the internet. It follows a script.

A crime that follows a script

Sextortion is a form of blackmail in which someone threatens to share a nude or sexual image (real or AI-fabricated), unless the victim pays or provides more intimate material. When the target is under 18, it is child sexual exploitation.

Offenders – frequently organised criminal networks overseas – work through a well-documented sequence. First contact usually happens on social media before the conversation is moved to another service, such as Snapchat or WhatsApp. The offender fast-tracks trust by sharing an intimate image, sometimes using images taken from earlier victims.

Once the target shares their image, the demands begin, often with countdowns engineered to cause panic. Meanwhile the offender searches their social accounts for family and friends to threaten to contact.

Each stage leaves linguistic “fingerprints”. eSafety’s investigators have compiled the gangs’ most common scripts, language indicators and recycled fake imagery, and supplied them directly to the major platforms.

The pattern is so recognisable, eSafety built a public campaign around it. “If sextortionists were honest”, launched in June, uses AI-generated characters to act out the script in advance so young men can spot it in their own messages.

If a short video can teach a teenager to recognise a sexual extortion script, why can’t the largest tech companies teach their systems to do the same?

What the report shows

The new report puts sexual extortion at its centre and shows the detection gap persists across all seven providers.

In the second half of 2025 alone, eSafety received more than 2,000 sexual extortion complaints: men aged 18 to 24 were the largest cohort, and Instagram and WhatsApp the services most named.

Horizontal stacked bar graph showing the top 10 services with the highest number of sexual extortion reports to eSafety.
While Telegram and TikTok are not part of this reporting series, eSafety has previously given transparency notices to both. eSafety

Yet Instagram used no language analysis in private messages. It relies on user reports, even though Meta removed end-to-end encryption from private messages in May this year, clearing the way for detection tools.

WhatsApp – where messages are encrypted – used none either and offered no dedicated way to report sexual extortion.

Apple’s iMessage also used none. Its nudity-blurring Communication Safety feature can’t detect extortion scripts or threats and is on by default only for self-declared under-18s.

Snapchat ran language analysis only on material reported by users and did nothing proactive, even on the unencrypted parts of its service. Discord used no language analysis at all, despite most of its service not being encrypted. Google used none on Messages or Gmail.

Microsoft illustrates both the possibility and the failure: it uses language analysis to detect sexual extortion on Xbox, yet applies no equivalent tools on Teams.

Vertical bar chart showing the top 6 services where 'threats' of sexual extortion occurred.
eSafety

If a service encrypts messages, it can make proactive detection of sextortion scrips difficult, although not impossible. And it can’t explain the detection gap on unencrypted services like Instagram, Discord, Gmail, Teams, or the parts of Snapchat that are not end-to-end encrypted.

When blackmail occurs in plain text, the barrier to detection is simply the platform’s priorities.

Where to from here?

Three steps would make an immediate difference.

First, platforms should deploy language analysis across every unencrypted service. It should be calibrated to protect both children and adults, using the indicators eSafety has already supplied. The regulator has collected the threat intelligence for them.

Second, detection should trigger intervention. If the victim receives a warning or interruption at certain moments the script predicts, it can interrupt the crime and redirect them to receive support. A legislated digital duty of care would make such safety-by-design a legal obligation rather than an optional extra.

Design matters, as the report found only 0.3% of teens who received Snapchat’s warning about a risky contact chose to block or report. However, good warning message design can work, and such interventions must be evaluated and continuously improved, not just switched on.

Third, companies need to share more information across platforms. This crime deliberately migrates between services – for example, from Instagram to WhatsApp (both owned by Meta) – precisely to exploit the gaps between them.

Social media and messaging platforms should share more threat intelligence across sectors such as finance, which is more regulated and has stronger connections to law enforcement. Currently, that’s not happening at a level needed to disrupt the criminal networks of sextortion.

Sexual extortion announces itself in plain text. The playbook has been recorded, studied, and delivered to the companies that host the crime. Detecting it does not require a breakthrough, but a decision to act.The Conversation

Joel Scanlan, Adjunct Associate Professor, School of Law; Academic Co-Lead, CSAM Deterrence Centre, University of Tasmania

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

ARIA welcomes global music industry’s new standard for AI labelling in recordings

July 10, 2026
The Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) has today welcomed a new labelling system introduced by the global music community. The system is designed to give fans clearer information about the use of generative AI in sound recordings and was announced by IFPI alongside the RIAA, A2IM, WIN, IMPALA, The Grammys, SAG-AFTRA and the Human Artistry Campaign.

ARIA CEO, Annabelle Herd, said: "Australian music fans, like fans everywhere, deserve to know how the music they love has been made. This is a practical, proactive step by the global music community to give them that clarity.

"Human artistry and authenticity are integral to what makes music so powerful. As artists find new ways to use these tools, and as fully AI-generated tracks arrive on streaming services in growing numbers, honest labelling helps listeners make informed choices and keeps human creativity at the centre of our industry. We welcome IFPI and its partners bringing the world's creators and companies together behind a single, clear standard.

"AI labelling is one of several conversations regarding how AI is reshaping the creative industries, they all require careful and rigorous consideration to find amicable solutions. Thae complexity of this environment underpins exactly why maintaining the current systems that function to protect artists, like copyright, is so critical. Copyright protects the most basic rights a creator has: to consent to how their work is used, and to be compensated for it, including when that work is used to train AI models. Clear labelling gives fans transparency; a working copyright system gives creators the consent and payment they are owed."

The system introduces two track-level labels. "AI-Generated" applies where generative AI produced the entirety or the primary creative elements of a recording, such as a lead vocal, a key instrumental performance, or an entirely prompt-generated track. "AI-Assisted" applies where a recording was created substantially by humans, who performed the lead vocal and primary instruments, with generative AI used for some expressive elements.

The labels use simple visual icons, supported by metadata and related delivery systems, so fans can see at a glance whether and how AI was involved in a track.

The labelling system will be available for use in the near future and applies to the use of generative AI in sound recordings. They do not currently cover lyrics, composition, music videos or cover art.

More information on the labelling system is available on the IFPI website.

Origin Energy to refund customers after ACCC investigation

July 14 2026
Scam warning: The ACCC is aware that scammers may call, email or text to falsely offer to help get compensation from various businesses. They may use this media release about compensation to convince people their contact is real.

STOP – Don’t give money or personal information to anyone if you’re unsure. Scammers will create a sense of urgency. Don’t rush to act. Don’t click on links even if the message appears to come from Origin Energy. Say ‘no’, hang up, delete.

CHECK – Ask yourself could the call, email or text be fake? Scammers pretend to be from organisations and entities you know and trust. Contact the organisation using information you source independently, so that you can verify if it is real or not. If you are concerned about the legitimacy of the contact, you should contact Origin Energy directly before providing any information.

PROTECT – Act quickly if something feels wrong. Contact your bank immediately if you have money stolen. If you have provided personal information call IDCARE on 1800 595 160. The more we talk the less power they have. Report scams to the National Anti-Scam Centre’s Scamwatch service at scamwatch.gov.au when you see them.

Origin Energy Limited will refund over $270,000 to more than 4,500 customers after an ACCC investigation into allegedly misleading representations regarding Origin’s “Ongoing Saver” residential electricity plan.  

The ACCC was concerned that Origin made statements both in the Ongoing Saver plan’s terms and conditions and in customer bills that represented charges would be lower than on Origin’s “Basic” plan for the life of the plan. In fact, some customers on Ongoing Saver plans were charged more than they would have been on the Basic plan.

The ACCC’s investigation into Origin formed part of its actions in response to CHOICE’s designated complaint about energy retailers falsely representing savings or value to consumers on certain energy plans.

“Electricity retailers that claim or suggest savings for consumers on their plans, including in the name of the plan, must ensure that the savings are actually delivered to customers for the life of the plan,” ACCC Commissioner Anna Brakey said.

“Energy plans are complex, and the mix of usage and supply charges makes it difficult for many consumers to assess potential savings. Retailers should provide clear and accurate information about their plans to help consumers make informed decisions.”

Origin does not admit that it breached the Australian Consumer Law but, in response to the ACCC’s concerns, it has committed to providing refunds to customers.

Affected customers will, on average, receive approximately $60 in remediation from Origin.

Origin will contact these affected customers to arrange a credit or a refund. Current Origin customers will be given the option of requesting a refund or an automatic credit, and former customers will be contacted by Origin about a refund.

In light of the remediation and compliance steps that Origin has taken, the ACCC has decided to resolve this matter administratively without taking further enforcement action.

The ACCC urges affected Origin customers to be aware of scammers claiming to be from Origin. Communications from Origin will not ask for credit card or banking details. If in doubt about the authenticity of any communications purporting to be from Origin, consumers should contact Origin through an independently sourced phone number or email address.   

As well as refunding affected customers, Origin will not use plan names that suggest savings or monetary value unless they are built into the plan. Origin will also discontinue its Ongoing Saver plan.

Consumers urged to check for cheaper prices
“We strongly encourage all consumers to use available Government energy comparison sites to try to find the best available energy deal for their circumstances, as there are large differences between the cheapest and most expensive plans,” Ms Brakey said.

Consumers should compare their current energy rates on the government comparison sites www.energymadeeasy.gov.au (for consumers in New South Wales, South Australia, Tasmania, the Australian Capital Territory and Queensland) and compare.energy.vic.gov.au (for consumers in Victoria).

Consumers can also call their existing retailer and ask for a better deal. Retailers are legally required to provide this information, as well as information about how the price of an existing plan compares to the regulated safety net price.

Retailers are required to let customers know every 100 days (or every 4 months in Victoria), through a statement on their bill, if a better deal is available.

Consumers should also check with their retailer or on energy.gov.au/rebates, to ensure they are receiving all eligible concessions and rebates available to concession card holders.

Designated complaint
The ACCC has also engaged with the Australian Energy Regulator and Victoria’s Essential Services Commission on the issues CHOICE raised in its designated complaint, as detailed in the ACCC’s Further Action Notice.

This engagement with specialist energy regulators and the resolution of the Origin investigation concludes the ACCC’s actions in response to the designated complaint.

Background
Origin Energy is one of Australia’s largest energy retailers and has approximately 4.8 million electricity, gas, LPG and internet customer accounts across Australia.

The designated complaints framework in the Competition and Consumer Act came into effect on 1 May 2024.

Under the law, three bodies can be designated by the Minister as designated complainants. Currently these are the Australian Consumers’ Association (CHOICE), Consumer Action Law Centre and Council of Small Business Organisations Australia (COSBOA).

On 21 May 2025, CHOICE made a designated complaint to the ACCC on potentially misleading practices by energy retailers in relation to certain energy plans. More information on the designated complaint and the ACCC’s actions in response is available on the ACCC’s website.

Misleading pricing and claims in relation to essential services, with a focus on energy and telecommunications, is a current ACCC compliance and enforcement priority.

Four ways to help your teen (and yourself) spend more time away from devices

A teenage boy and his mother using smartphones and sitting on a couch.
Dejan Marjanovic/Getty Images
Danielle Einstein, Macquarie University

Phones and devices have become inextricably linked with everyday life. They store our credit cards, provide critical bus updates, and allow us to communicate whenever we need to.

But when our device use starts to affect our mood, replace real-life experiences, or interfere with face-to-face relationships, it’s a sign our habits have crossed the line from healthy to unhealthy.

How are teens more affected?

Teenagers are particularly vulnerable to excessive device use, as the part of the brain responsible for planning, imagining consequences and working for delayed rewards has not yet fully matured. They also have heightened sensitivities to rewards and social evaluation (in other words, what your peers think of you).

Research shows teenagers are more prone to mood swings, are still evolving their ability to manage uncertainty and are learning how to regulate their emotions.

All of this makes them more susceptible to online triggers that can trap a vulnerable teen in a cycle of conflicting and constantly changing emotions, particularly when information is arriving constantly.

For teens (and adults) it can become a complete world of its own where daily responsibilities are avoided and challenges are only faced with a dependency on phones.

So how do you know when it’s become a problem?

What to look out for

There are some obvious signs excessive device use is becoming a problem for teens (or yourself).

1. They use phones to fill in spare time. If every quiet moment is filled with scrolling, checking notifications or opening apps, it shows a teen’s device is the primary way they respond to spare time, stress or discomfort.

2. They appear distracted when you talk to them. If your teen automatically reaches for their phone midway through conversation, it might be a sign they devalue face-to-face exchanges and have lost the discipline to wait.

3. They put off important tasks. When teens routinely avoid everyday responsibilities such as work, homework, school, household chores or tasks that involve mixing with new people.

4. They seem tired all the time. Teens may block negative thoughts by scrolling in bed, socialising online late in the night, or even getting into bed after the school day.

How does it get to this stage?

The devices we rely on have the potential to develop what I call the “addictive pull” due to the features and services available on them. The “pull” begins when notifications, such as likes, messages, loot box wins and emails, arrive on devices unpredictably. Some are positive while others are neutral. And some also relieve worries. This creates a powerful dopamine-driven loop.

Over time, the device itself becomes a conditioned stimulus. This means even something as simple as seeing your phone case, or watching your device’s screen light up, is enough to trigger an urge to check it. It’s almost as if we are magnetically pulled to the device in the hope of a reward (such as more messages or likes), or to soothe a preoccupying worry.

This can also create an anxiety loop which means even without a notification, a person checks their device, rechecks it and experiences brief moments of relief via a message or app. When the loop occurs on repeat, it winds up worry and creates emotional dependence on others or apps.

The “addictive pull” can be hard to resist. Over time these unnoticed habits can become associated with the space where devices are often used (such as the bedroom, the apartment, the bus). The “pull” to re-engage with a device is a result of predictable conditioning and reinforcement processes rather than a lack of willpower. The bedroom – a place of rest, privacy and study – can be particularly problematic for teens and adults.

Leading by example

We cannot expect children or teens to break from the “addictive pull” if the adults around them don’t either.

As a parent, these are some ways you can lead by example to be more intentional when using devices.

1. Recognise the subtle tension that builds when you have a worry and want to reach for your device immediately.

2. When you walk into your home, place your phone or smartwatch out of the way and in a bag.

3. Do not have your phone or tablet in arm’s reach when it is designated family time.

4. Work with each family member to put apps being used without restraint onto one device per person. For instance, a parent or older teen might have TikTok on a tablet and not on their phone (so they can use their phone without distraction). They should then try to use that tablet in only one room of the house, outside of the bedroom.

Remember, an honest picture of everyone’s screen time habits sit on the device’s screen time records. We may get a minor fright when looking at it, but rather than resigning ourselves to this new way of life – and ignoring the insidious impact on attention, mood and wellbeing – we can commit to one another to make small changes.The Conversation

Danielle Einstein, Adjunct Fellow, School of Psychological Sciences, Macquarie University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

‘I hate you!’: what little kids really mean when they say this

A small child in a coloured raincoat stands in a forest clearing and yells.
Natalia Lebedinskaia/ Getty Images
Alison Fogarty, Deakin University; Grace McMahon, Murdoch Children's Research Institute, and Monique Seymour, Deakin University

I hate you. You’re the worst mum in the world!

It’s a sentence that can feel heartbreaking to parents. You try to set a boundary with your little one and they lash out with “I hate you”.

Those words land can like a punch. Even when you know, deep down, that your child doesn’t really mean it.

Why do kids say this? And how can you respond?

Hitting a nerve

Part of what makes “I hate you” so hard to hear is that it can touch on something most parents quietly worry about. “Am I doing this right?”, “Am I a good parent?”.

Being on the receiving end can also be unexpectedly triggering. For parents who grew up in households where strong emotions were dismissed, minimised, or hidden, a child’s emotional outburst can feel alarming, disrespectful or even shameful. Your instinct might be to shut it down quickly, or to feel something has gone badly wrong.

What’s going on when a child says ‘I hate you’?

Try not to read too much into it if you child says “I hate you”. Young children, especially those under six, are in the early stages of learning how to understand and regulate their emotions. The part of their brain responsible for regulating emotions, is still very much developing.

While this is most common in young children, children of all ages can struggle to find words for overwhelming feelings.

When a young child is overwhelmed by an emotion (like anger at being told no or disappointment of being told to leave the playground), they often don’t have the language to help them express these big feelings.

So they may use the strongest words they know without understanding the true meaning.

The good news is children are most likely to express big, uncomfortable emotions with the people they feel safest with. They trust that this person can handle their feelings, and are confident their love is unconditional. This reflects a strong, secure parent-child relationship.

What can parents do in the moment?

1. Take a breath before you respond

Notice what this brings up for you. Where you can, take a moment to regulate your own emotions so you can model emotion regulation for your child.

2. Acknowledge and validate the emotion

Before anything else, name what you’re seeing. For example, “I can see you’re really angry right now. That makes sense. You really wanted to keep playing, and it’s hard when we have to stop.”

This isn’t about agreeing with the outburst. It’s about letting your child know their feeling has been seen and that anger itself is OK. Strong emotions need acknowledging before they can settle. Teaching children all emotions are OK early on sets them up for strong emotional regulation skills later on.

3. Stay present while the feeling passes

Once you have acknowledged the feeling try to avoid problem-solving straight away. Staying present (keeping your attention on your child — resisting the urge to walk away, pick up your phone, or move straight to problem-solving) and helping your child ride out the big emotion and find a calmer state is the goal.

For some children, they may respond well to a hug or having you sit calmly next to them. Other children may want more space. Staying calm and being present is often enough to help a child regulate their emotions.

4. Gently name the limit

Once there is more calm, gently remind your child that while all emotions are OK, telling someone you hate them can hurt their feelings. For example, “It’s OK to feel angry but it’s not OK to say I hate you. What else could you say next time?”

5. Reconnect

Once your child is calm, find a way to show they are safe and loved. Repairing a situation after conflict is one of the strongest ways to build and sustain a secure attachment – or the bond between parent and child. This is also an important way to model respect, even during times of conflict. You could say, “That was hard. You were really upset. I love you, even when you’re angry.”

6. Help build their emotional literacy

Teaching kids to recognise and name all their emotions can help give them the words to say “I’m angry” next time. Integrating this into play and via books can be useful. Practising strategies that help them respond to strong emotions (for example, jumping up and down, colouring, going outside, petting a pet) when they are calm, can help kids when intense emotions do show up.

7. Remember that support is available

If you find yourself upset about these moments often, or they are bringing up things for you, it’s worth reaching out for support. Talking to someone, whether that’s a friend, a GP, a psychologist or a helpline, can really make a difference and help parents be in a place to better manage when these situations come up.


If this article has raised issues for you, some helplines include:

PANDA — 1300 726 306 (for perinatal mental health, which is also relevant if the parent is also experiencing postnatal difficulties)

Beyond Blue — 1300 22 4636

Mensline- 1300 78 99 78 (a free telephone and online counselling service offering support for Australian men anywhere, anytime)

13YARN — 13 92 76 (for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples)The Conversation

Alison Fogarty, Research Fellow, Lifespan Institute and School of Psychology, Deakin University, Deakin University; Grace McMahon, Clinical Psychologist and Research Officer in the Intergenerational Health Group, Murdoch Children's Research Institute, and Monique Seymour, Clinical Psychologist, Research Fellow in the School of Psychology, Deakin University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Grattan on Friday: AI’s opportunities and risks front and centre on Albanese government’s agenda

Michelle Grattan, University of Canberra

If you are feeling financially depleted personally, and pessimistic about the economic outlook generally, figures released this week won’t cheer your mood.

The OECD found Australia was one of 11 developed countries where the real minimum wage had fallen between April 2025 and April 2026.

Meanwhile, Deloitte Access Economics in its latest Business Outlook cut its forecast for growth in 2026–27, with the dismal message, “The economy is now expected to limp along at less than 2.0% annual growth for the next two years”.

This was followed by the International Monetary Fund’s World Economic Outlook data projecting Australia’s GDP growth to be 1.9% this year and 1.7% next year.

Australia’s overall economic growth is slow, but at least it’s in positive territory. However, that’s held up by population increase. On a per capita basis, GDP went backwards in two of the past five quarters (March 2025 and March 2026) and was flat in a third (September 2025).

No wonder consumer confidence is low, and One Nation’s tune rings loudly in the ears of voters who hear it reflecting their grievances.

The government would say, hang on a minute, it’s not all bad. Business investment is strong. Unemployment is still very low. It would also point out that “talking down” the economy can play into “pushing down” the economy.

Nevertheless, the government can read the numbers, and one thing they tell us is that without refuelling that vital growth agent, productivity, we will stay in the doldrums.

Despite all the talk since the election about action to boost productivity, we need faster progress to improve our poor performance.

Yes, some reforms are in the pipeline, for example to remove obstacles and streamline approvals in the building sector and to reduce the regulatory burdens on projects.

But those looking for bigger, faster gains are inevitably turning their attention to Artificial Intelligence. At the government level, AI is receiving extensive attention from cabinet and ministers individually.

AI can, potentially, be the accelerant under big productivity gains. New data centres (not all involve AI but increasingly they do) are fuelling business investment. Australia is an attractive home for international investment in these centres because of its land and water, its uptake of technology, and the stability of its legal and political systems.

But AI also brings a mass of potential negatives (or fears of them). Data centres soak up vast amounts of energy and water, as well as producing noise and heat. Some communities are unhappy about them.

This new industrial revolution fires up its bright-eyed advocates, and comes with warnings from the worriers.

It’s a bit like that in the federal ministry too, where there’s a spread of views about the rollout of policies and which stakeholders should have how much say in what’s done.

Some characterise it as a sort of tug-of-war between the enthusiasts and the cautious.

Former industry minister Ed Husic favoured overarching new legislation, but the government has gone down the more decentralised route, with ministers and regulators having carriage of AI in their own areas.

Assistant Minister for Science, Technology and the Digital Economy Andrew Charlton is seen by colleagues as something of an ambassador for AI. Although well down the formal pecking order, Charlton carries weight because he’s highly qualified in economics and tuned into the AI sector. As cabinet secretary he has a level of political access other assistant ministers would not.

Charlton is a strong promoter of AI but also mindful of the need for strict conditions, not least for maintaining its social licence.

Industry minister Tim Ayres – who’s Charlton’s senior minister in the portfolio – is attuned to the opportunities AI presents and doesn’t want Australia to miss out. But he comes from the union movement and has highlighted unions (which are cautious about AI) should be “at the top table” in the rollout.

Employment minister Amanda Rishworth is concerned about the fate of many workers. On Wednesday she released a report prepared by her department on “AI and Employment in Australia”. One line in it neatly sums up where things are. “AI could reshape the labour market, but its effect on employment is highly uncertain.” Bearing in mind we’re in the first stage of this journey, the report found,

There is no evidence to date of broad labour market upheaval driven by Artificial Intelligence (AI) in Australia. Overall labour market conditions remain strong by historical standards, youth outcomes have mostly held up, and occupational reshuffling has not accelerated.

However, occupations more exposed to potential automation by generative AI have grown more slowly than other occupations. Between November 2022 and February 2026, employment in the most-exposed fifth of occupations grew by 5.6%, compared with 9.5% in the least-exposed fifth.

We find a small negative relationship between AI exposure and employment growth. For an occupation with AI exposure one standard deviation above average, our model implies employment was about 2% lower by February 2026 than it would have been under its pre-ChatGPT trend.

The government in December released its National AI Plan. It was interpreted as “light touch” regulation, and reflecting the position of Treasurer Jim Chalmers. It was also light on detail, although it did include an AI Safety Institute and flagged expectations data centres would have to meet, that were subsequently released.

AI can’t have a set-and-forget policy. It has to be constantly updated as things develop, and hot issues must be addressed as they emerge.

Just now, there’s much concern in the music industry and other parts of the arts and creative communities. Arts Minister Tony Burke is dubbed the “shop steward” for the musos. Creatives are particularly worried about their copyright being undermined. Attorney-General Michelle Rowland, who oversees copyright, is said to be disturbed by the agitation. The government believes the existing law on copyright is robust enough, but is ready to act if particular problems need attention.

The government is very aware of the need for Australia to stamp its sovereignty on AI policy. Perhaps influenced by its battle with the tech giants over the enforcement of the under-16 social media ban, it believes it can’t allow “the tech bros to let it rip”, as one source puts it. But it can’t allow the country to fall behind the pack either.

Next week Anthony Albanese will give a speech on AI. It is expected to present a broad picture rather than all the nitty gritty. But it is being billed as showing the level of prime ministerial engagement in this area in which the government is trying to thread a course between huge potential and undoubted risks.The Conversation

Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

East coast gas market to be well supplied in Q4 2026, but more investment needed to meet long-term demand: ACCC

July 10, 2026
Wholesale gas on Australia’s east coast is expected to be well supplied in quarter 4 of 2026 (October to December 2026), but further investment is needed to meet long-term demand, the ACCC's latest Gas Inquiry report reveals.

The east coast gas market is predicted to have a surplus of 13 petajoules (PJ) in quarter 4 of 2026 if the liquefied natural gas (LNG) producers export all their uncontracted gas.

While this is typically a period of lower gas demand due to milder temperatures, it is the highest forecast quarter 4 surplus since 2023.

The east coast is also forecast to be well supplied in quarters 1 and 4 of 2027.

As in previous years, supply over winter 2027 is expected to be tight. There is a risk of shortfalls in quarters 2 and 3 of 2027 if the LNG producers export all their uncontracted gas.

“Our analysis indicates the east coast gas market is expected to be well supplied in late 2026 and early 2027, although supply-demand conditions are likely to tighten in winter 2027, particularly in the southern states,” ACCC Commissioner Anna Brakey said.

“Higher production volumes in coming quarters could be used to fill storage facilities ahead of increased demand next winter.”

East coast supply-demand outlook for quarter 4 2026 and 2027 (PJ). Source:   ACCC analysis of data obtained from gas producers in April 2026 and of the domestic demand forecast (Step Change scenario) from AEMO, Gas Statement of Opportunities, March 2026.

Middle East conflict not materially affecting domestic gas prices so far
Global energy prices surged in the wake of the Middle East conflict but the disruptions to international markets have so far not resulted in a material impact on domestic gas prices.

This contrasts with 2022, when international conflicts contributed to high prices on Australia’s east coast.

“One reason why there has been a smaller impact domestically is that market conditions differ to those during the 2022 global energy crisis,” Ms Brakey said.

“In 2022, the global market was less prepared for shocks. Disruptions to global supply led to higher demand for Australian gas, but this demand coincided with higher domestic gas demand, depleted storage levels and domestic supply constraints, contributing to significant increases in domestic prices.”

Spot prices are currently below 2025 averages, reflecting stable demand and supply during a relatively warm winter period.

Prices under contracts agreed during the first quarter of 2026 for gas supply in 2027 were lower than the previous quarter, though broadly in line with pre-conflict levels.

The June 2026 report covers long-term contracts agreed up to 31 March 2026, a short time into the conflict. The ACCC’s next report in September 2026 will provide more evidence on any impacts the conflict has had on prices for long-term gas supply.

More investment in production is required to meet future demand
While short-term supply conditions have improved, the ACCC's latest forecasts indicate additional investment will be required to meet long-term east coast demand. This is despite gas consumption being projected to decline overall.

Investment by the Queensland LNG producers and their associates, who control 84 per cent of commercially viable gas resources, will be central to increasing supply. This is particularly important given the significant barriers faced by smaller producers and new entrants.

“Reducing barriers for new entrants and producers seeking to develop prospective resources would help increase and diversify supply, increase competition and put downward pressure on prices over the longer term,” Ms Brakey said.

“In the context of the Government’s proposed gas reservation scheme, policy settings should support the most efficient sources of supply and infrastructure investment.”

To inform policy considerations, the June 2026 report provides updated information on the LNG producers’ gas assets and export commitments, and on competition in upstream production.

Changes to production and export volumes may affect the impact of the reservation policy, including how much gas the policy will deliver to the domestic market.

Shining a light on gas storage
The report also analyses the availability and use of storage facilities on the east coast.

Storage services are expected to play an increasingly important role in meeting wholesale gas demand as southern production declines and demand for gas-fired electricity generation becomes more volatile, particularly after coal generators retire.

The ACCC’s analysis shows Victoria’s Iona Underground Gas Storage facility is critical to southern state markets, with few alternatives available to respond to periods of volatile demand, including seasonal peaks.

The report found there is significant unused capacity in other east coast storage facilities; however, commercial and technical constraints may limit how much of this additional storage can be made available to the market.

Final guidance on retailer selling practices
The ACCC has also published its final retailer selling practices guidance, following consideration of submissions received from gas market participants. 

The guidance is intended to encourage a more customer-focused approach by retailers and to support more informed decision-making by commercial and industrial gas users.

The guidance is available on the ACCC’s website.

Background
Australia’s east coast gas market is an interconnected grid joining Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia, Tasmania and the Australian Capital Territory. The Northern Territory and Western Australia are separate gas regions.

The ACCC’s inquiry examines the wholesale gas market, primarily gas sold by producers to large gas buyers, including commercial and industrial gas users and gas retailers.

The ACCC’s next interim gas inquiry report is scheduled for September 2026.

Growing home battery uptake delivering lower electricity bills, but consumer protections needed: ACCC

July 10 2026
Home battery uptake continues to surge with more than 400,000 batteries installed across Australia in past 12 months, but energy‑specific consumer protection reforms are needed to address a range of emerging issues, the ACCC’s latest Electricity Market Inquiry report reveals.

The report found households with solar and battery systems had electricity bills that were between about $329 and $909 (20-52 per cent) lower over the course of a year compared to customers using electricity from the grid only.

Savings were even greater for the 24 per cent of solar and battery customers participating in virtual power plants, with bills typically $762 to $1,093 (57-63 per cent) lower.

A virtual power plant is an energy service where individual sources of generation from different locations, such as home batteries, are aggregated and controlled by a central operator.

“Households that have invested in batteries are achieving significant savings, particularly when their battery is connected to a virtual power plant,” ACCC Commissioner Anna Brakey said.

“Virtual power plants can help households get more from their battery by shifting energy use away from peak periods and sending it back to the grid when it is most valuable. This can help customers lower bills and pay off their system faster.”

The report, however, highlights that virtual power plants are complex and customers bear most of the risk for the operator’s performance and whether benefits are achieved.

“When customers join a virtual power plant, they hand over control of their battery to an operator and are rewarded for its use to support the broader system. It is important customers understand this when signing up to participate in a virtual power plant,” Ms Brakey said.

“Depending on their circumstances, some households may be better off with solar and a battery alone. Customers should make sure they understand the benefits and risks of any product that they sign up to.” 

Figure 1: Median bills paid by residential virtual power plant and other customers, by region, excluding Energy Bill Relief Fund rebates, quarter 3 2023 to quarter 3 2025. Source: ACCC analysis of AEMO’s Distributed Energy Resource register and retailer billing data. Nominal dollars, excluding GST.

Stronger consumer protections needed
While wider virtual power plant participation could unlock savings for all customers, ACCC analysis shows consumers still face significant risks when investing in solar and batteries.

Consumer reports to the ACCC about household batteries and new energy services have increased by 107 per cent over the past 12 months as the number of systems installed increases rapidly. Reports to other consumer bodies have also similarly increased.

These reports include consumers being sold systems that do not suit their needs, faulty installations, and poor battery performance, with many reporting difficulties when trying to get issues fixed or resolved.

The ACCC is also aware that some consumers are finding it difficult to compare offers and switch providers due to complex contracts and limited compatibility between batteries and virtual power plant products.

“As more Australians invest in batteries and participate in virtual power plants, it’s critical that consumer protections keep pace,” Ms Brakey said.

“Consumers should be able to easily compare offers, switch providers, and fix issues if things go wrong, but gaps in the current suite of consumer protections are preventing people from being able to do so.”

“The New Energy Tech Consumer Code addresses some of the issues identified in this report, but its benefits are limited by factors such as no independent dispute resolution or appeal process, reliance on self-reported audits for compliance, and lack of transparency around breaches,” Ms Brakey said.

The ACCC is calling for an overarching consumer duty with supporting electricity-specific protections to ensure products and services are designed and delivered in consumers’ interests.

These supporting protections include requiring battery sellers and installers to sign up to a code of conduct to access the Cheaper Home Batteries Program, as well as expanding energy ombuds scheme coverage to resolve more residential and small business disputes.

“We will continue to actively monitor consumer complaints and where issues are able to be addressed under the Australian Consumer Law, we will hold solar and battery installers, retailers and suppliers accountable,” Ms Brakey said.

Background
The National Electricity Market is comprised of South East Queensland, New South Wales (including the ACT), Victoria, Tasmania and South Australia. Western Australia and the Northern Territory are not connected to the National Electricity Market.

To inform this report, the ACCC collected billing data from nine retailers that together cover 89 per cent of residential customers and 88 per cent of small business customers in New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia and South East Queensland.

The ACCC obtained additional data for customers on virtual power plant services.

In 2018, the Australian Government directed the ACCC to hold an inquiry into the prices, profits and margins in relation to the supply of electricity in the National Electricity Market.

On 12 May 2026, the Australian Government announced a further 12-month extension to the inquiry.

The ACCC is required to report at least every 6 months. This is the 15th time the ACCC has reported as part of this inquiry.

The report is available on the ACCC’s website at Electricity market monitoring 2018-2026.

Mental illness is up in young people, dementia is now the biggest killer: Australia’s health in 2026

Composite image of the Australian flag, a beer, a cancer cell, charts and a crowd of people
Rob Curren/Getty, Science Photo Library/Canva, Canva, The Conversation
Fron Jackson-Webb, The Conversation and Matt Garrow, The Conversation

Australians’ life expectancy has increased steadily over time but dropped during the COVID pandemic, according to a new report released today by the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare.

The report – Australia’s Health 2026 – shows life expectancy for a boy born in 2022–2024 was 81.1 years, while a girl could expect to live, on average, to 85.1 years.

However newer data not included in the report shows this has stabilised and life expectancy in 2024 was up marginally at 85.5 for women and 81.6 for men.

Between 2003 and 2024, Australians’ life expectancy and years lived in “full health” increased. But the time spent in poor health also rose: by 1.2 years for men and 1.5 years for women.

More than three in five (61%) Australians now have at least one chronic condition – such as asthma, arthritis or depression – and almost two in five (38%) have two or more.

Cancer causes the most burden of disease, or years of healthy life lost to illness and premature death. Mental conditions and substance use disorders as a group are the second biggest cause of healthy life lost.

Dementia is now the leading cause of death in Australia, accounting for almost one in ten deaths in 2024. Dementia deaths rose by 39% in a decade, while deaths from coronary heart disease – the previous leading cause of death – decreased by 18%.

So what are the biggest changes to Australia’s health and wellbeing over the past two years? The Conversation’s panel of health experts explain.

Our experts

Sebastian Rosenberg
Sebastian RosenbergMental health
Sarah Diepstraten
Sarah DiepstratenCancer
Peter Breadon
Peter BreadonHealth expenditure
Helen Dickinson
Helen DickinsonCarers
Nicole Lee
Nicole LeeDrinking
Kathryn Backholer
Kathryn BackholerObesity

Mental illness is rising among young people but supports aren’t keeping up

Sebastian Rosenberg
Sebastian RosenbergAssociate Professor, Brain and Mind Centre, University of Sydney

One in five Australians aged 16–85 (22%) had experienced a mental disorder in the previous 12 months. This rate appears fairly stable.

However, the proportion of people aged 16–24 experiencing a mental disorder has increased, from 26% to 39% between 2007 and 2020–2022.

Given 75% of all mental illness manifests before the age of 25, we need effective responses for young Australians.

Mental illness is 15% of the total burden of disease and suicide. Meanwhile, self-inflicted injury was the leading cause of disease burden among males aged 15–44.

Yet a previous report found mental health accounts for only 7% of total health spending. This gap doesn’t explain all of the crisis in mental health, but it explains something.

Some 6.5% of Australians are reported as having psychosocial disability (disability arising from a mental illness). This is up from 4.6% in 2018.

Now half a million Australians with severe or moderate psychosocial support needs aren’t receiving support through the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) or other government‐funded programs.

More cancer in young people but survival rates are increasing overall

Sarah Diepstraten
Sarah DiepstratenSenior Research Officer, Blood Cells and Blood Cancer Division, Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research

Significantly more Australians are surviving five years after a cancer diagnosis, up from 50% in 1987–1991 to 72% in 2017–2021.

This is due to people being diagnosed earlier, when cancers are easier to treat, as well as the availability of more effective therapies.

While survival rates have not improved for all cancers equally, even the deadliest cancers have seen major improvements. Pancreatic cancer only has a 14% five-year survival rate (2017–2021), but this has increased from only 3.1% (1987–1991).

The report highlights increasing cancer incidence among younger people. Diagnoses for people in their 30s have risen by 11.6% since 2000, primarily for colorectal and thyroid cancers.

But the actual numbers remain low (135 cases per 100,000 people), and the number of deaths from cancer among younger people has actually declined by 38% since 2000.

While cancer remains the greatest contributor to disease burden in Australia, addressing modifiable risk factors such as obesity and smoking – coupled with cancer screening and focused research initiatives – will help reduce cancer incidence and deaths going forward.

Obesity has overtaken smoking as the leading contributor to disease

Kathryn Backholer
Kathryn BackholerCo-Director, Global Centre for Preventive Health and Nutrition, Deakin University

Excess weight and obesity have overtaken tobacco use as the leading risk factor contributing to disease burden.

In 2022–24, around 13.2 million adults (67%) and 1.4 million children and adolescents (27%) were living with obesity or were overweight.

The generational pattern is particularly concerning. Australians born more recently are more likely to be living with obesity compared to previous generations at the same age. Among adults aged 25–34, obesity increased from 20% in 2011–12 to 29% in 2022–24.

Urgent action is needed to create healthier environments that make it easier for Australians to choose healthy foods and stay physically active.

We also need more equitable access to evidence-based treatment and care, including GLP-1 weight-loss medicines. As the report notes, the high cost of these medicines means the people with the greatest need are often less able to access them.

Risky drinking is down, but we still drink more than our OECD peers

Nicole Lee
Nicole LeeAdjunct Professor at the National Drug Research Institute, Curtin University

Australians drink 9.8 litres of pure alcohol (773 standard drinks) per person each year. This is well above the OECD average of 8.4 litres.

First Nations people are less likely to drink at all than the general population and risky drinking among in First Nations people has fallen from 48% in 2010 to 33% in 2022-23.

Risky drinking, which is often linked to injuries and emergency department visits, has also declined in the general population.

But alcohol is now one of the most preventable drivers of chronic disease. It contributes to more than 200 health conditions such as cancer, heart and liver disease, injuries and poor mental health.

With Australia’s population ageing – and three in five Australians already living with at least one chronic condition – reducing risky drinking is one of our biggest opportunities to prevent future disease and ease pressure on the health system.

Health-care costs have risen, with more people skipping care

Peter Breadon
Peter BreadonProgram Director, Health and Aged Care, Grattan Institute

After pandemic fluctuations, three long-term trends resumed: government spending kept going up, so did the share of funding going to hospitals, and so did patient out-of-pocket fees.

Australia spent just over $10,000 per person on health in 2023–24. That’s 17% higher than a decade ago, on top of inflation, and a quarter higher than the average among wealthy nations.

The biggest area of health spending remains hospitals, which take up a growing share, rising from 39% to 42% over the past decade.

Average out-of-pocket fees totalled $1,634, nearly $200 more than a decade earlier (in today’s dollars). As fees go up, more people are skipping care, with 8% of Australians saying they delayed or avoided a GP visit in 2024–25 because of the cost.

And for some care, patients shoulder a much bigger share of the bill. They pay the most for dental care, covering 61% of total costs, so it’s no surprise 16% of people skipped dental care due to cost.

Carers are compensating for system gaps and are burnt out

Helen Dickinson
Helen DickinsonProfessor, Public Service Research, UNSW Sydney

Unpaid carers provide ongoing support to family members, friends and neighbours who have a disability, chronic illness, mental illness, age-related frailty, dementia, or other condition that limits their independence.

In 2022 around 3 million Australians (one in eight) provided informal care, including 1.2 million primary carers. These carers perform a wide range of tasks that help the person remain safe, healthy and living in the community.

Unpaid carers are estimated to save the Australian economy around $77.9 billion each year in avoided care costs.

Research consistently shows carers experience poorer health and wellbeing than the general population. The AIHW report shows:

  • 61% of carers did not report healthy levels of wellbeing, compared with 34% of Australians overall

  • 43% felt lonely (often or always) compared with 12% of Australians overall

  • 36% experienced high psychological distress, compared to 16% of Australians overall.

The report warns that:

without better-coordinated and more responsive formal support, pressures on unpaid carers may intensify.

Yet the federal government’s proposed NDIS reforms may increase pressures on unpaid carers by tightening eligibility and reducing funded supports.

This risks shifting greater caring responsibilities onto families.

Disclosure statements:

Sarah Diepstraten receives funding from the National Health and Medical Research Council, Cure Cancer Australia and My Room Children’s Cancer Charity.


Kathryn Backholer is Vice President (Policy) at the Public Health Association of Australia. She receives funding from the National Health and Medical Research Council, the Australian Research Council, The Ian Potter Foundation, The National Heart Foundation and VicHealth for her research related to food and nutrition and obesity prevention.


Nicole Lee has previously been awarded grants by state and federal governments, NHMRC and other public funding bodies for alcohol and other drug research. She is CEO of Hello Sunday Morning, a government funded not for profit alcohol early intervention service.


Grattan Institute has been supported in its work by government, corporates, and philanthropic gifts. A full list of supporting organisations is published at www.grattan.edu.au.


Helen Dickinson receives funding from the Australian Research Council, National Health and Medical Research Council, the Medical Research Future Fund and Australian governments.


Sebastian Rosenberg does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.The Conversation

Fron Jackson-Webb, Deputy Editor and Senior Health Editor, The Conversation and Matt Garrow, Editorial Web Developer, The Conversation

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

How can you be tired yet wired? Blame your stone‑age brain

Woman lying on a bed, looking exhausted but awake.
Kinga Howard/Unsplash, CC BY
Michelle Spear, University of Bristol

The clock reads 2:13am. You are exhausted. Your eyes ache, your body feels heavy and the alarm is already beginning to loom over the night, yet your brain refuses to let go. Instead, thoughts arrive in waves. Did you send that email? What if you forgot something important? Perhaps now is also the perfect time for your mind to replay a conversation from 2017 with forensic precision.

Many people recognise this frustrating state of being “wired but tired” – the paradoxical feeling of being physically exhausted but mentally unable to switch off. Surely tiredness should produce sleep automatically, but the brain does not simply fall asleep because the body is fatigued. In fact, under stress, exhaustion and sleeplessness often occur together. Part of the reason lies in the biology of survival.

The human stress response evolved to deal with immediate physical threats. For most of human history, danger tended to be extreme and short-lived – a predator nearby, an environmental hazard or conflict with another human group. In those moments, the brain’s priority was not rest but survival.

When the brain detects threat, a region called the amygdala initiates the body’s classic fight-or-flight response. Stress hormones including adrenaline and cortisol are released. Heart rate increases, breathing quickens and attention sharpens. Energy is diverted away from long-term maintenance tasks towards immediate action.

This response is extraordinarily useful – if you are trying to escape a sabre-toothed tiger. It is much less useful when the “threat” is an overflowing inbox or mounting financial pressure.

Modern stressors are psychologically powerful but biologically peculiar. Unlike predators, they rarely resolve quickly. Emails continue arriving. Work follows us home through smartphones and laptops. Social media creates a constant stream of social comparison and low-level vigilance. Even leisure time has become strangely porous, interrupted by notifications, messages and often the expectation of permanent availability.

The result is that the parts of the brain responsible for keeping us alert can remain partially activated for long periods. This matters because sleep is not simply the absence of wakefulness. Falling asleep requires the brain to actively reduce alertness. A network of arousal centres in the brainstem, hypothalamus and forebrain normally keeps us awake and attentive during the day. To transition into sleep, these systems must quieten down.

Under long-term stress, however, the brain can become stuck in a state of hyperarousal. Even when the body is exhausted, the brain continues scanning, anticipating and rehearsing. From an evolutionary perspective, this makes a certain kind of sense. If the environment feels threatening or uncertain, being fully offline may not seem safe.

One reason this state feels so unpleasant is that physical exhaustion and mental arousal are controlled by overlapping but partly separate systems. Your muscles may desperately need rest while your brain continues producing stress-driven alertness. The result is the strange mismatch many people know well, a tired body and racing thoughts.

Cortisol also plays an important role. Under normal circumstances, cortisol follows a daily rhythm. Levels rise in the morning to promote wakefulness and gradually decline towards night. Chronic stress can disrupt this pattern, leaving the body activated later into the evening.

Some studies suggest that people with insomnia show elevated metabolic and neurological activity even while trying to sleep – almost as though the brain is idling too high. Modern life may amplify this problem in ways our nervous systems did not evolve to handle.

A man sitting at his desk, looking stressed.
Chronic stress disrupts cortisol’s usual rhythms. Miljan Zivkovic/Shutterstock.com

Why the modern world makes it worse

Artificial light suppresses melatonin, the hormone that helps regulate sleep timing. Smartphones provide endless cognitive stimulation at exactly the point the brain should be winding down. Doomscrolling combines emotional arousal, uncertainty and novelty – three things human attention systems find almost impossible to ignore.

Then there is rumination: the repetitive mental replaying of worries and problems. Humans possess a remarkable ability to mentally simulate the future and revisit the past. This capacity helps us plan, learn and avoid danger. But it also means the brain can continue generating stress responses long after any immediate threat has disappeared.

The cruel irony is that the more exhausted we become, the harder emotional regulation often gets. Sleep deprivation itself increases amygdala reactivity while reducing the moderating influence of the prefrontal cortex – the part of the brain involved in rational control and perspective.

A tired brain becomes more emotionally reactive, which can make worries feel even louder at night. In other words, being overtired can make the brain less capable of calming itself down.

This helps explain why “just relax” is usually terrible advice for insomniacs. Hyperarousal is not simply a failure of willpower. It is a deeply biological state shaped by stress systems, hormones, attention networks and learned patterns of vigilance. That does not mean the situation is hopeless.

Sleep researchers often emphasise that rest and safety are closely linked in the brain. Consistent routines, reduced evening stimulation, exercise, daylight exposure and limiting late-night screen use can all help reinforce the signals that night is a time for recovery rather than alertness. Cognitive behavioural therapy for insomnia has also proved remarkably effective, partly because it targets the cycle of anxiety and sleeplessness itself.

Perhaps the most important point is broader. Feeling “wired but tired” is not evidence that your body has failed to rest properly. Often it is evidence that the brain has become too good at staying alert in a digital world that never really stops.The Conversation

Michelle Spear, Professor of Anatomy, University of Bristol

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

If so many people live with toxoplasmosis, how dangerous is this brain parasite really? Should I be worried?

Chris Tonkin, WEHI (Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research)

Around one in three people worldwide have been infected with a microscopic parasite called Toxoplasma gondii – or simply “toxo” – which can cause toxoplasmosis. After the initial infection, toxo settles into our muscles and brain, where it can remain for life.

A parasite that lives in our brain for life – that sounds worrying.

Yet, the vast majority would not even know they are infected, as it rarely poses clinical problems in healthy people who aren’t pregnant. In fact, our bodies do a remarkable job of protecting us against a barrage of infections, without us even knowing, toxo included.

So, why has toxo received so much attention? And are you at risk even if you don’t have a cat?

Do we get toxo from cats?

Cats can carry toxo and pass it on to humans through their faeces. They are the only “definitive hosts” in which the toxo parasite can reproduce.

But this doesn’t mean it’s only cat owners who are at risk.

Worldwide, eating undercooked meat that contains toxo is a major source of infection.

It’s also important to note that cats only shed toxo when they are infected for the first time and are then immune afterwards, meaning they no longer shed and pass it on. Most infected cats show no symptoms, but if they develop the clinical disease toxoplasmosis, they may lose their appetite and experience fever and lethargy.

Who is at risk?

Many people first hear about the risk of toxo infection in relation to pregnancy.

Expectant mothers are told to stay away from undercooked meat and kitty litter – two ways we can accidentally ingest toxo. The parasite can cross the placenta and infect the developing fetus, leading to blindness, congenital neurological defects and miscarriage.

Thankfully, this is very rare in Australia, estimated to be 0.17–2.3 cases per 10,000 births. The risk is considered low enough that routine screening during pregnancy is not necessary.

Some people will have previously been infected with toxo and won’t be at risk of a new infection during pregnancy. The risk is to pregnant women who have never had toxo.

In Australia, infectious disease doctors and oncologists are also trained to look for toxo.

A dormant infection can become a deadly illness if it reactivates into an acute infection which can occur if you become severely immunosuppressed, after receiving a bone marrow transplant or contracting HIV. In these rare cases, effective therapies are available, although with some significant possible side effects.

Toxo can also cause progressive blindness if parasites lodge in the retina. Retinal toxoplasmosis has been estimated to be one in 149 people in Australia. Optometrists and ophthalmologists are well trained to look for this and other eye infections.

The risk is much higher in other countries

For instance, the estimated infection rate in France is around 50%, while in Brazil up to 80% of people have been exposed. These countries report a far higher number of related health problems.

Such high infection levels are thought to do with eating undercooked meat, greater numbers of stray cats, the type of locally circulating strains, and local hotter and humid climates that allows toxo to survive in the environment.

Three grey cats.
Cats can be carriers of toxoplasmosis and increase the risk of human infection. Maxine Kharkovsky/Unsplash

OK, but how does toxo affect the brain?

Once infected, toxo can live in the host’s muscles or brain for life. But we have no way of knowing exactly where it is; the only tests we have show the presence of antibodies, not the parasite itself.

Interestingly, when a rodent’s brain is infected, toxo can manipulate the rodent’s behaviour, including reversing its natural aversion to cat odour.

Scientists have speculated that the parasite does this to make the infected rodent less likely to run away, and therefore more likely to be eaten by a cat. This completes the parasite’s complicated life cycle; their sexual cycle exclusively takes place inside cats.

Such a remarkable ability of toxo – a single-celled organism – to impart behavioural changes on a complex organ like the brain seems fantastical. But it has been proven true over multiple rodent laboratory studies.

But while we know toxo can affect rodents’ brain and behaviour, we don’t know how this happens, exactly why, or whether it happens outside of the laboratory.

Can toxo affect human behaviour?

In humans, researchers have found links between toxo and a wide range of brain disorders and behaviours, including risk-taking behaviour and psychiatric conditions, especially schizophrenia.

But we should view these findings very cautiously, as these are correlative studies. This means they do not prove toxo is the cause of these diseases or behaviours, just that there is a link. Further, they show only a mild increase in risk. Other published scientific papers refute some of the findings.

Correlative studies also cannot prove which came first: whether a condition such as schizophrenia, for example, changes your behaviour in ways that make a toxo infection more likely, or whether a toxo infection predisposes you to – or even causes – this condition.

This is the most contentious area of research in the field, so is continues to be a major focus for scientists.

How worried should I be?

So should the fact that one in three people carry a brain-dwelling parasite keep us awake at night?

Probably not.

For most healthy people, toxo remains a silent passenger for life, causing no illness at all. Our health-care system already manages the situations where it poses genuine risks, particularly during pregnancy and in people with weakened immune systems.

But understanding how this remarkably successful parasite hides from our immune system could lead to something we’ve never had before: treatments that completely clear dormant infection.

That would make a real difference for the people most at risk and would transform how we think about one of the world’s most common infections.The Conversation

Chris Tonkin, Associate Professor, WEHI (Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research)

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Unfair fees and low competition: why the pharmacy sector needs a shake up

Peter Breadon, Grattan Institute; Mia Jessurun, Grattan Institute, and Molly Chapman, Grattan Institute

The average Australian visits a community pharmacy 18 times a year – more than any other health service.

Pharmacies will only get more important as Australia’s population gets older and sicker, and more scripts are dispensed.

But policy failures are holding the sector back. Vested interests control decision-making. Prices and services aren’t based on evidence. And regulations block competition, innovation and discounting.

A new Grattan Institute report shows how to set the pharmacy sector up for the future.

Secret backroom deals

Australian pharmacy policy is a case study in bad governance.

Pharmacies are funded and regulated through Community Pharmacy Agreements negotiated between the federal government and the Pharmacy Guild of Australia.

The Guild represents most Australian pharmacy owners. It’s also one of the most powerful political lobby groups in the country. In the past five years, it has donated A$2.5 million to political parties, making it the largest donor from the health-care sector.

No other Australian health industry group gets to negotiate its own funding behind closed doors, with no public evidence to justify the decisions. These opaque negotiations should be replaced with independent, transparent, policy decisions that are based on evidence.

It looks like we’re paying too much

When a pharmacy dispenses a Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) medicine, it gets fees to cover labour, administration and handling. The patient pays up to the maximum co-payment, and the government pays the rest.

Like so much in pharmacy policy, the dispensing fees are set through negotiation with the guild, with no public data to justify the numbers. As result, we can’t know if the price is right – but there are signs it’s too high.

Funding for each script has increased even as e-prescriptions and automation have slashed the labour involved in dispensing. The guild’s own data suggest member profits have more than doubled in real terms over the past decade.

Notes: Includes over co-payment scripts only. Covers funding for dispensing medicines, not underlying cost of medicines. Source: PBS (2017–2025), CC BY-NC-SA

The fix is clear. Government funding shouldn’t be negotiated at all. Like for public hospitals and aged care, it should be determined by the Independent Health and Aged Care Pricing Authority, based on real cost data.

For patients, discounts on PBS medicines are restricted by complex rules. Those rules depend on how much a medicine costs in total, counting funding from both patients and the government.

For the cheapest medicines, discounting is allowed. For the most expensive, it’s banned outright. For those in the middle, pharmacies can offer discounts, but only if they give up all their government funding for that script.

In 2015, an optional $1 discount on the maximum patient out-of-pocket was introduced, but it’s being phased out. It should be reinstated and increased over time.

Some claim it’s unfair if some patients get a discount when others don’t. People in areas with little competition between pharmacies are more likely to miss out. But these aren’t surcharges – total fees are capped – and discounts in one pharmacy don’t come at the expense of patients in another.

Even if dispensing should be restricted, the rules we have, which block discounting for some medicines and not others, make little sense.

Note: Includes non-Safety Net and non-Repatvriation Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme scripts only. Grattan analysis of Department of Health, Disability and Ageing (2026), CC BY-NC-SA

Services need to be good value

Proposals to expand the services that pharmacies can offer – to include things such as prescribing medicines and chronic disease management – have generated heated debate.

The guild and pharmacist workforce groups say more pharmacy services is a commonsense solution to growing demand for primary health care. But medical bodies warn it would fragment care and risk patient safety.

The evidence shows it’s not so black and white.

International studies show pharmacists can safely provide a range of services, including prescribing, and that these services are popular with patients.

But with rapidly growing health-care demand and spending, services must also offer good value for money. Here the evidence is much weaker. That’s because pharmacies pose unique risks to value.

Walk-in appointments mean some conditions are treated that would have resolved on their own. There is a risk of duplicating GP care. And a retail setting creates commercial incentives to promote unnecessary care.

Only one new service has enough cost-effectiveness evidence for a national roll-out: prescribing for uncomplicated urinary tract infections.

International evidence for some other services is promising. But dozens of government-funded trials have failed to show their cost-effectiveness here.

The federal government should coordinate stronger national trials that focus on the most promising services, such as treating shingles and prescribing contraception.

Get pharmacists to work alongside GPs

It’s time to scale up a new type of “integrated pharmacist”. Instead of dispensing, they work in general practice alongside GPs to provide medicine reviews and patient education.

The United Kingdom and Canada already fund these positions at scale. Australia should too, with government funding for pharmacists in general practice and Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations.

Unleash competition

Pharmacies are private businesses that receive billions of dollars in government funding. In return, they should face competition that promotes improved efficiency, quality and convenience – like other businesses.

But location rules dictate how close a new pharmacy can open to an existing one, and how far an existing one can move.

Several European countries lifted similar restrictions in the late 1990s and early 2000s. The result was more pharmacies, longer opening hours, and, in several cases, lower prices.

Ownership rules ban anyone but pharmacists from owning a pharmacy. This is supposedly to ensure pharmacies prioritise patient care. But we don’t apply this rule anywhere else. Standards of care are upheld by clinician training, registration and accountability, regardless of who owns the business. Pharmacists already carry those obligations.

Together, location and ownership rules protect a small group of incumbents from having to compete on prices or quality.

The government should scrap these rules, and ask the competition watchdog to design competition safeguards, alongside independent reporting on quality and outcomes.

Future pharmacy

The current Community Pharmacy Agreement expires in mid 2029. Three years is enough time to collect cost data, start trials, legislate competition reforms, and set up quality monitoring.

If the federal government acts now, the current agreement – the eighth – should be the last.The Conversation

Peter Breadon, Program Director, Health and Aged Care, Grattan Institute; Mia Jessurun, Associate, Disability Program, Grattan Institute, and Molly Chapman, Associate, Health Program, Grattan Institute

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

More pharmacists will be able to vaccinate children under 5. Here’s what you need to know

Mother with young child in arm choosing products on pharmacy shelf.
Drazen Zigic/Getty
Nicholas Wood, University of Sydney and Lucy Deng, University of Sydney

More children under five years old should be able to be vaccinated in pharmacies from January 2027 under a range of measures designed to boost vaccine coverage announced in this year’s federal budget.

Other measures include funding to send families SMS reminders and targeted information when their child’s vaccines are due.

These measures aim to stem a decline in childhood vaccine coverage we’ve seen since 2020.

What’s the issue?

Vaccine coverage in Australian children has been steadily declining since 2020. The latest data show a drop in fully vaccinated 12-month-olds from 94.8% in 2020 to 90.5% in 2025.

On-time vaccination (getting a routine vaccine within 30 days of the recommended age) has dropped even further compared with levels before the COVID pandemic.

In 2025, nearly two in five children received the first dose of measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine (recommended at 12 months old) late. One in five children received their second dose of a diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis (DTP)-containing vaccine late.

Two out of ten adolescents had not received a human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine dose by 15 years of age. Three out of ten had not received an adolescent dose of meningococcal ACWY vaccine by 17 years of age.

Return of ‘old foes’

The declines in coverage are occurring at a time when we have seen a global rise in vaccine preventable diseases.

Measles cases have risen globally and led to the loss of measles elimination status in many countries, including the United Kingdom and Canada. In Australia, there have already been more than 100 measles cases this year.

We’re battling Australia’s worst diphtheria outbreak in decades with more than 425 cases in 2026 (mostly in the Northern Territory and Western Australia). This is a scenario that could be curbed by vaccines.

This, coupled with the detection of polio in sewage in Western Australia, is a timely reminder to make sure you and your children are up to date with your routine vaccines.

Why the decline?

There are many reasons why vaccination coverage is falling, including:

  • a decline in trust of health-care providers
  • concerns about safety and efficacy of vaccines
  • proliferation of online health-related misinformation
  • practical barriers (such as out-of-pocket costs, convenience and access to vaccine providers)
  • a shortage of doctors, nurses and Aboriginal health workers, especially in rural areas, making it harder to get appointments or access walk-in clinics.

A 2025 national survey asked parents of children under five about barriers to vaccination. More than half of parents of partially vaccinated children said vaccines were unsafe and did not trust information about vaccines from healthcare providers.

A survey of Australian parents looked at the impact of the COVID pandemic on trust and confidence in routine vaccinations. It found that between 2017 and 2023 there was an increase in the proportions of parents expressing ideas about childhood vaccinations that have been shown to be incorrect. These included that vaccine ingredients were unsafe, vaccines cause autism and children received too many vaccines.

Are there safety concerns?

The vaccines recommended and used in the childhood national immunisation program a decade ago are essentially the same ones used today.

Australia has about 300,000 births recorded annually, with an estimated coverage of 90% for infant vaccines. This means about 2.5 million infants have received vaccines over the past decade since 2015.

Australia also has a comprehensive system to detect serious safety signals. If there were any serious issues related to national immunisation program vaccines over this time, we’d have spotted them by now – we haven’t.

How will the new measures help?

Family life is busy so being able to get your kids vaccinated at pharmacies free of charge will hopefully make it easier to stay on top of vaccinations and get vaccinated on time.

This year, the new nasal flu vaccine, registered for children aged two to under 18 years, is available in some pharmacies. However, access and eligible ages for free flu vaccine vary by jurisdiction.

Currently, children aged five and older can already receive childhood vaccines in pharmacies under the National Immunisation Program Vaccination in Pharmacies program.

From January 1 2027, children under five years should also be able to get their childhood vaccines in pharmacies in the new expanded program. A health department spokesperson confirmed to The Conversation that at this stage, participating pharmacies would start doing so from next year, where state and territory legislation permitted it.

These timely initiatives target barriers to accessing vaccination. So they are an important step to stop further declines in coverage and restore community protection against further resurgence of vaccine preventable disease.The Conversation

Nicholas Wood, Professor, The Children's Hospital at Westmead Clinical School and Sydney Infectious Diseases Institute, University of Sydney and Lucy Deng, Paediatrician and Clinical Senior Lecturer, Children's Hospital Westmead Clinical School, University of Sydney

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

ABC will trial using AI for journalism. What are the risks and benefits?

Distorted Claude logo on blue background.
Brecht Corbeel/Unsplash
Timothy Koskie, University of Sydney

Earlier today, the ABC flagged a shift in their position on generative artificial intelligence (AI) use in their news production. Despite previous caution, a recent deal with US tech company Anthropic has opened the door for ABC staff to bring Claude AI into their broadcasting news work.

For now, the scope of this inclusion is limited to about 100 employees. However, the ABC has signalled a willingness to expand this scope to include other tasks. The broadcaster will also hire specialists to help with AI adoption.

The broadcaster is also piloting conversion of regional radio bulletins into articles with its own AI tool developed by the ABC.

The goal is to free up time for staff to engage in other core journalistic work, such as investigations, while also expanding the ABC’s production capabilities.

Australians have a distinctive distrust of AI tools, so it remains to be seen how the public will react to this change. On the other hand, the decision tracks with a long history of editors and journalists being early adopters of tech innovations.

Journalists already use various data tools. And it’s possible to use generative AI to augment journalistic work in valuable and unprecedented ways.

However, this comes at a time when journalism faces crises of sustainability for journalists and news – problems AI can as easily exacerbate as remedy.

The original tech-heads?

Journalists and news producers have long had not only a vested interest in innovations that might improve their busy workflows, but also a broad curiosity about the cutting edge of tools and technologies.

Generative AI in chatbot form has only made headlines in the past three years. But journalists have saved time by using automated systems and “robo-writing” to convert data into simple news stories for over a decade. In one 2016 study, readers even rated computer-written articles as “more credible and higher in journalistic expertise”.

Nevertheless, with rampant tech adoption also come concerns that some innovations are more disruptive than beneficial.

For example, social media and analytics introduced the almighty algorithm as an unwelcome additional editor to journalists’ work, undermining their autonomy.

Generative AI introduces a new threat that raises existential concerns for the sustainability of news.

Disrupting and displacing journalism

Journalists are more worried about generative AI than they were with other automated tools in the past – because chatbots can seemingly write just like a human can. In response, they’ve been emphasising their indispensable role as gatekeepers who convey news to the public.

So if organisations choose to use AI to help produce journalism, a key question is how to handle ethics and concerns over quality. Time-poor professionals in fields from law to medicine have found themselves burned when their generative AI went off-script and crafted plausible fictions.

This potentially raises a bigger threat for journalists. The profession is already facing a crisis of public mistrust, including in Australia. Relying on AI for content generation opens the door to missteps that news producers like the ABC can ill afford.

But these risks can be mitigated if newsrooms dedicate additional effort to verifying and curating the AI content. This makes journalists’ roles as gatekeepers more important than ever. Yet it also relies on audiences having a relationship with journalists and appreciating their judgement and analysis in the first place.

These efforts represent a new kind of work, one that shifts the lens away from the forms of production that have long been central to journalism.

A space of opportunities

Conversely, the latest AI tools do offer journalists new ways to augment their work. The large language models and other AI tools the public uses to generate office emails or funny cat pictures have been used by journalists globally to engage in unprecedented investigations and news production.

BBC’s in-depth coverage of Russia’s presence in Ukraine leveraged AI to dig through troves of text and video. This provided insights that would have been impractical or impossible to achieve through manual methods.

Global South news producers have used AI to overcome endemic resourcing challenges. They’ve been able to repurpose and translate content, extending the capacities of already stretched news reporters.

Generative AI can save time. Using AI tools for routine news production can make room for journalists to improve their relationships with audiences, focus on quality, and make a stronger case for journalism’s distinctive value.

Displacing journalists or displacing journalism?

These changes at the ABC are coming at a time when funding and resources for journalism are becoming increasingly scarce. The business models that have long underpinned our media system were rendered unsustainable by big tech, while Australian news organisations are having to compete with overabundant online media from across the world.

AI tools bring potential for further displacement. AI summaries served by search engines summarise news content instead of directing online traffic to the original news source.

Additionally, AI-generated news obscures Australian media outlets or redirects users to larger international news organisations – particularly those in the US. Newsrooms are weighing their options on how to best use AI even as they strategise how to compete with it as a source for news.

The ABC’s goals for using AI in their news work fits a long-established historical trend toward keeping journalism on the cutting edge of what technological innovations can offer.

The efficiency gains and expanded capabilities for journalism are real, and audiences can appreciate its outputs even as they distrust the technology itself.

The question remains whether the ABC can channel AI into benefits for the public in a way that does not sacrifice their commitment to news quality or the public’s esteem for the public broadcaster.

Correction: this article was updated to clarify that Claude AI is not being used for converting radio bulletins to text, but instead the ABC uses its own AI tool for this pilot.The Conversation

Timothy Koskie, Postdoctoral Researcher, School of Media and Communications, University of Sydney

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

13,000 tonnes of space junk clutters Earth orbit. Here’s how it could be cleaned up

A bin dropping junk and a vacuum cleaning it up in space
The Conversation, CC BY-SA
Alice Gorman, Flinders University

Seventy years ago, Earth had only one satellite: the Moon. Now it has more than 15,000 – about 10,000 of which are owned by Elon Musk’s SpaceX. The world’s first trillionaire plans to launch one million more satellites, each roughly 70 metres long and 20 metres wide, that would form a data centre megaconstellation.

But more satellites means more space junk, which is already threatening critical infrastructure we rely on every day.

Addressing this problem effectively requires work across three fronts: technology, policy and philosophy.


The race to the Moon and beyond is accelerating. Some say it’s for the benefit of all humanity. But is it really? In this seven-part series, we explore what our future in space will look like, how we might travel and survive out there, and what’s needed to stop a catastrophe from happening.


13 million cane toads worth of space junk

Space junk is everything in Earth orbit that doesn’t have a purpose. It includes discarded rocket bodies, defunct and broken satellites, and fragments down to nanoparticle size. There are 36,000 pieces of junk larger than ten centimetres and tens of millions of smaller pieces and particles.

The estimated weight of all of this junk is 13,486 tonnes, the equivalent of 13 million adult cane toads. The United States, Russia (as well as the former USSR), and China are the biggest contributors.

Space junk is dangerous because it’s orbiting at almost unimaginable speeds – 7 kilometres per second on average in low Earth orbit. A collision can break up a satellite and create even more space junk.

The worst case scenario is called Kessler syndrome. Each collision creates space junk which collides with other space junk, in an endless cascade. It could make regions of Earth orbit unusable, or possibly even cut Earth off from space.

Human spaceflight is already threatened by the debris around Earth. The International Space Station manoeuvres to avoid collision at least once a year.

The default solution is to let space junk get dragged into the atmosphere where it incinerates. For example, at least one Starlink satellite burns up in the atmosphere every day.

But this is now creating enough soot and alumina particles to have an impact on the ozone layer, which protects us from harmful ultraviolet radiation.

New technology can help

Technological solutions involve active debris removal, and strategic satellite and mission design.

Active debris removal gets rid of old spacecraft by tipping them into the atmosphere or pushing them into a “graveyard” orbit" which isn’t used by functioning satellites. There’s even a hit list of the 50 most dangerous spacecraft – mainly abandoned rocket bodies.

Debris removal technologies include nets, magnets, tethers, sails, slingshots, and harpoons. Very few have been successfully tested in space.

New satellites can be made from materials that are more durable, so they last longer – or more disposable, so they can be used and quickly de-orbited.

Japan has been testing wood as a spacecraft material. Other options include refuelling spacecraft to extend their life.

Better policies

Policies are also changing to focus more on satellite end-of-life disposal.

The old standard was that spacecraft should not remain in original mission orbits for more than 25 years. Now it’s five years. The disadvantage to this policy is that more spacecraft will burn up in the atmosphere.

The European Space Agency is spearheading a zero debris policy, and the Inter-Agency Debris Co-ordination Committee issues debris mitigation guidelines. There’s also an international standard for space debris mitigation.

Better international co-operation could be achieved through space traffic management. Space traffic management aims to establish “road rules” for avoiding congestion in orbit, by limiting debris creation, co-ordinating orbital activities and sharing information. However, a globally agreed space traffic management system doesn’t yet exist.

All the same, satellite operators are starting to take their environmental responsibilities seriously. But is this enough?

Rethinking space

Old ways of thinking about space have not served humanity well.

The ideologies driving the space junk problem are competition for prestige and orbital resources, and the belief that there are no moral obligations to the space environment. Often, orbital space is not seen as an environment at all because it is without life.

These beliefs coincide in the “techbro” space, in which billionaires are competing to launch satellite megaconstellations. Research has shown caring for the environment is not seen as masculine.

Earth and space are no longer separate domains. Space junk should be managed as a more-than-planetary interconnected system extending from the spacecraft cemetery at the bottom of the ocean, through the atmosphere, to all Earth and lunar orbits. The Moon’s surface is also being impacted by space junk.

Philosopher Val Plumwood’s co-participation approach to environmental management provides a new perspective. We give the environment what it needs to flourish, instead of depleting it to the point of collapse.

The jury is still out on whether Kessler Syndrome will eventually cut us off from space. Perhaps new myths and stories will arise around the space junk people see burning through the atmosphere. Watching the skies for “cultural meteorites” is becoming part of the shared human experience.The Conversation

Alice Gorman, Associate Professor in Archaeology and Space Studies, Flinders University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

From pureed meals to fresh greens: how space food is advancing to keep astronauts healthy

Tubes with donuts, wheat and corn pouring out into an astronaut's open helmet
The Conversation, CC BY-SA
Sara Webb, Swinburne University of Technology; Jac Cotttee, Swinburne University of Technology, and Rebecca Allen, Swinburne University of Technology

The Artemis II mission to the Moon has reignited humanity’s desire for exploration and renewed our perspective of Earth. It has also revived our fascination with space food.

As space missions become longer and more ambitious, food in space has emerged as a crucial priority, intrinsically linked to brain health, culture, sustainability and agriculture.

These challenges are driving innovation, inspiring practical solutions for life both on Earth and beyond.


The race to the Moon and beyond is accelerating. Some say it’s for the benefit of all humanity. But is it really? In this seven-part series, we explore what our future in space will look like, how we might travel and survive out there, and what’s needed to stop a catastrophe from happening.


Once an engineering problem

In the early days of human space travel, eating was treated largely as an engineering problem rather than an aesthetic one. Astronauts survived on pureed meals squeezed from aluminium tubes, and on freeze-dried cubes.

In 1973, Skylab, the United States’ first experimental space station in low Earth orbit, introduced the first truly functional space galley allowing for the preparation and cooking of meals.

Since then nutrition and food have remained secondary concerns, often reduced to issues of mass and storage efficiency.

Perhaps the most famous early space food controversy occurred during the Gemini 3 mission in 1965, when astronaut John Young secretly smuggled a corned beef sandwich into orbit, only for crumbs to float through the capsule in what became known as a cautionary tale. The crumbs from the sandwich could have resulted in catastrophic errors, if they had jammed or impacted any of the onboard equipment.

Today researchers are no longer asking whether astronauts can eat in space, but instead: how does the space environment alter how food tastes? How can nutrition optimise astronaut performance and cognitive function? How can food growth systems support sustainability during long-distance space exploration missions?

And perhaps most importantly, what does human food culture look like beyond Earth? Because even in space, life is about more than survival – there must still be room for small luxuries.

A small space full of metal compartments.
The Skylab kitchen, the first functional galley in space. NASA

Spoilt for pre-packaged choice

Astronauts are currently spoilt for choice when it comes to pre-packaged foods aboard the International Space Station, with the current menu offering a selection of more than 200 meal and beverage options. The catch though, is that aboard their missions, they are only allowed 8-10 of those different choices. This means that during months-long missions, food fatigue can kick in.

But one thing is still missing – daily fresh produce.

The astronauts are treated to a few pieces of fresh fruit each resupply mission every few months. But this certainly doesn’t compare to the fresh food us humans on Earth have access to.

Ready-to-eat fresh food in space has become a common theme of our research in recent years.

We’ve been exploring the viability of yoghurt production, mushroom growth and even various microgreens on board the International Space Station. Microgreens are the young, tender seedlings of edible vegetables or herbs.

A small tray of plants growing under harsh white light.
Scientists are currently exploring the viability of growing fresh good on board the International Space Station. NASA

This research explores everything from the basics of nutritional properties of the food, to how the biological systems may have changed in orbit.

In a microgravity environment, producing foods as basic as yoghurt, mushrooms and microgreens becomes exponentially more complicated. Limited resources, stresses on the biological systems, and constrained space are all major considerations.

But these are challenges we must overcome, especially as we think of the future of space exploration where we will no longer be able to rely entirely on prepackaged meals.

Four people floating in a small capsule, alongside several oranges and apples.
Astronauts aboard the International Space Station with fresh food delivered. NASA/Chris Williams

More than nutrition

There are serious concerns for humans’ gut health over long space flights. Increasing fresh, space-cultivated foods might help to address this.

Above nutrition, food is vital to human culture. Shared meals and the art of preparing even the most basic meals play deeply into the mental health of humans, and this is especially true aboard a space station.

Even kids recognise the importance of food as a cultural tool. When British astronaut Tim Peake challenged students to create a meal for him on the International Space Station, many thought about the meaning different foods had in their own lives and what they didn’t want astronauts to miss out on.

This human connection is vital. It helps us appreciate how space on a fundamental level is a human endeavour.

As we look beyond low-Earth orbit and set our sights on a Moon base in the 2030s, we must consider both nutrition and the overall experience of living and eating for the astronauts on lunar missions that will last weeks or even months.

Through the Artemis II mission we saw first-hand the simple joys that came from shared meals. For example, the crew celebrated their far side of the Moon crossing with Canadian maple cream cookies. We even saw a tub of Nutella floating through the capsule.

Food cannot just be functional; it needs to serve multiple purposes. Sometimes, it should simply bring joy.

The future of space is uncertain, but one thing we can count on is that food is one of the vital parts of our continued exploration.The Conversation

Sara Webb, Associate Dean of Innovation and Engagement, Swinburne University of Technology; Jac Cotttee, PhD Student, School of Science, Computing and Emerging Technologies, Swinburne University of Technology, and Rebecca Allen, Co-Director Space Technology and Industry Institute, Swinburne University of Technology

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Disclaimer: These articles are not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment.  Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of Pittwater Online News or its staff.