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    Minerals Council migration overhaul push: project delivery lessons for mine planners

    February 9, 2026|

    Reviewed by Joe Ashwell

    Minerals Council migration overhaul push: project delivery lessons for mine planners

    First reported on Australian Mining

    30 Second Briefing

    Minerals Council of Australia chief executive Tania Constable is calling for a major overhaul of the skilled migration system to ease what she describes as a mining workforce “crunch”, particularly in engineering, geoscience and critical minerals processing roles. The MCA wants faster visa processing, clearer pathways for experienced overseas professionals, and better recognition of mining-specific qualifications to support projects in remote regions such as the Pilbara and North Queensland. Persistent shortages in drill and blast engineers, metallurgists and underground supervisors are already delaying project timelines and driving up labour costs.

    Technical Brief

    • Policy concern extends to sustaining existing production rates while simultaneously building new capacity.
    • For similar large resource provinces, rigid migration rules can become a hard cap on project delivery.

    Our Take

    The Minerals Council of Australia has recently been pushing both for a Victorian mining growth plan and now for migration changes, signalling that MCA is trying to tackle the skills pipeline on two fronts: long-term domestic training and short-term international recruitment.

    Within our 130 Policy stories, Australia features frequently in pieces about labour and permitting, so a migration-focused intervention from MCA is likely to feed into ongoing federal–state debates over who carries responsibility for resourcing new mining and critical minerals projects.

    For operators planning Australian projects, a skills ‘crunch’ combined with tighter safety and automation demands seen in items like the McArthur River Mine RCT deployment suggests that competition for experienced technical staff will remain intense even as some tasks are automated.

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    Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

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