Senator FARRELL (South Australia—Minister for Trade and Tourism, Special Minister of State and Deputy Leader of the Government in the Senate) (14:58): Thank you, Senator Green, and I know you come from the great resources state of Queensland. Senator Birmingham: Not now—once great. Senator FARRELL: No, it'll stay great. Don't you worry! As this side of the chamber understands, the road to net zero is paved with Australian resources, resources that not only are extracted in Australia but are processed locally to create secure jobs and open up more pathways for skills and training. That includes critical minerals—an apt name given how critical they are to renewable technologies like solar panels and electric vehicles— Senator Birmingham interjecting— Senator FARRELL: Why don't you solve your own problems with your former leader of the opposition in South Australia, Senator? Why don't you focus on him rather than interfering with me? I know you're embarrassed by it! That's why the Labor Party announced the production tax incentive for critical minerals. Senator Watt interjecting— Senator FARRELL: That's very unfair! I think you should withdraw that! That's for tax incentives and critical minerals as part of the most significant budget for the resources sector in a generation. It's a foolproof, no-risk approach to grow our critical minerals industry, strengthen supply chains and create well-paid jobs in the regions. Modelling shows that building downstream critical minerals processing could generate $70 billion in GDP and create an additional 143 jobs by 2040. (Time expired) The PRESIDENT: Senator Green, first supplementary?