Australia news live: ACT closes 71 schools over play sand health scare; NSW police charge 752 people in DV blitz | Australia news

New concerns over play sand in ACT, with 71 public schools closed today

The ACT has closed 71 public schools today amid concerns more children’s coloured play sand may contain asbestos.

The ACCC said yesterday Kmart and Target had issued a voluntary recall notice for four additional brands of the sand, saying the dangerous material had been detected in some samples after laboratory testing. It said respirable asbestos had not been detected, adding the risk of the asbestos found to be airborne or fine enough for inhalation is low.

Coloured play sand products that are part of the recall. Photograph: ACCC Product Safety

Still, the ACT said out of its regulatory obligations and “ in the interest of the safety of our students, staff and community” it would close some schools to allow for assessment, clean-up and remediation.

The closures follow others last week after a range of colourful sand products imported from China were recalled amid similar concerns.

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Tom McIlroy

Tom McIlroy

Government to pay for removal of gas from 20 student residential buildings

The federal government will pay to remove gas from 20 student residential buildings in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane and Adelaide, part of what is being dubbed Australia’s largest apartment electrification project.

The assistant minister for climate change and energy, Josh Wilson, has announced the $50m project, set to be delivered with accommodation owner Scape Australia and the Clean Energy Finance Corporation, and designed to reduce energy usage for more than 17,000 students.

Photograph: Joel Carrett/AAP

The plan is also expected to boost efficiency measures including improved insulation in new student accommodation and an energy metering pilot to better manage buildings’ energy use, providing students with more comfortable homes. Wilson said:

Electrifying residential accommodation is essential to the task of reducing emissions and future-proofing Australian homes; it also makes them cheaper to run and more comfortable to live in.

As Australia’s renewable, reliable and sustainable energy transition picks up speed, it’s great to get behind a project that will benefit today’s students as they complete their education while living in these newly electrified residential buildings.

In advancing the decarbonisation of Australian apartments, the Albanese government is delivering on its promise to act on climate change, which is what Australians, and especially young people, expect us to do.

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