Australia news live: large fire at Geelong oil refinery; Canavan defends Coalition’s hardline immigration plan

April 16, 2026:

Australia news live: large fire at Geelong oil refinery; Canavan defends Coalition’s hardline immigration plan

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22.01 BST

‘Unprecedented’ fire at oil refinery in Geelong

Fire crews continue to battle an out-of-control blaze at a Geelong refinery that broke out late last night.

Residents in areas south of the Viva oil refinery in Corio – one of Australia’s two remaining refineries – have been warned to stay inside to avoid smoke.

Geelong’s mayor, Stretch Kontelj, told ABC Melbourne radio this morning that the fire was “unprecedented”.

“Speaking to the management, no one can recall an incident of this magnitude either,” he said shortly before 6am on Thursday. “But from reports, it is coming under control.”

The refinery said no one had been reported injured so far, and that there was no immediate impact on fuel supplies.

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22.21 BST

Geelong refinery supplies 50% of Victoria’s fuel, and 10% of Australia’s in total

Viva Energy’s refinery in Geelong supplies about 50% of Victoria’s fuel, and 10% of Australia’s in total, according to the company’s website.

The refinery is just one of two remaining in Australia, and employs more than 1,100 people. The other is Ampol’s Lytton refinery in Brisbane. Both rely on government support to stay open.

Seven charts that reveal how unprepared Australia was for the fuel crisis

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Viva Energy says on it’s website:

double quotation markThe refinery can process up to 120,000 barrels of oil per day, manufacturing petrol, diesel, LPG, jet fuel, avgas and Low Aromatic Fuel to support the Federal Government’s petrol-sniffing prevention program.

These include being Australia’s only manufacturer of hydrocarbon solvents, marine fuel oil, low aromatic fuel, avgas, bitumen and high-quality plastic feedstock used to create food packaging, medical equipment and polymer banknotes.

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22.16 BST

Good morning, Nick Visser here to take things over. Let’s get to it.

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22.09 BST

Matt Canavan defends Coalition’s migration policy

Ima Caldwell

Ima Caldwell

The Nationals leader, Matt Canavan, defended the Coalition’s planned crack down on immigrations as “fair and reasonable” and that migrants would understand the policy.

The Nationals leader, Matt Canavan, speaks to journalists in the Press Gallery at parliament house.
The Nationals leader, Matt Canavan, speaks to journalists in the Press Gallery at parliament house. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

Asked on 7.30 last night how Australia’s migrant communities would see the plan, Canavan referred to the “rigour” of the naturalisation process his Italian grandparents went through in the 1950s and his own publicised section 44 high court citizenship saga (which he said ultimately proved him to be a “dinky-di Aussie”). He said:

double quotation markIt’s fair and reasonable that we set high standards to join the club of Australians and I’m sure migrants here today want to see that …

We have a Government that has put its head in the sand now and has not listened to the Australian people that clearly want change.

Canavan claimed support for Australia’s migration program is “falling off a cliff.”

When the show’s host, Sarah Ferguson, asked again about the specific wording of a policy described as “discriminatory”, Canavan said:

double quotation markI think we should discriminate on values …

We shouldn’t discriminate on colour, religion, sexuality, gender, but surely … we should discriminate on people who don’t support democracy, who profess support for terrorism or violence, who don’t believe in equality between male and female genders. People who have those views I don’t want them in our country.

Canavan reached for a literary quote: “Having good fences make for good neighbours”.

Ferguson noted:

double quotation markI’ll comment that the Robert Frost line in that poem was delivered in irony.

But we’ll return to that another day along with many other questions, thank you for joining us …

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Updated at 
22.01 BST

‘Unprecedented’ fire at oil refinery in Geelong

Fire crews continue to battle an out-of-control blaze at a Geelong refinery that broke out late last night.

Residents in areas south of the Viva oil refinery in Corio – one of Australia’s two remaining refineries – have been warned to stay inside to avoid smoke.

Geelong’s mayor, Stretch Kontelj, told ABC Melbourne radio this morning that the fire was “unprecedented”.

“Speaking to the management, no one can recall an incident of this magnitude either,” he said shortly before 6am on Thursday. “But from reports, it is coming under control.”

The refinery said no one had been reported injured so far, and that there was no immediate impact on fuel supplies.

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Updated at 
22.01 BST

Welcome

Good morning and welcome to our live news blog. I’m Martin Farrer with the best of the overnight stories and then Nick will take over.

Matt Canavan has defended the Coalition’s planned immigration shake-up as “reasonable and fair” and said it would be accepted as such by migrants already in Australia. More coming up.

Residents in parts of Geelong have been warned to take shelter due to smoke from an out-of-control fire at the Viva oil refinery in Corio – we’ll be bringing you more details soon.

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