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Albanese urged to seize on US offer for Darwin port

May 28, 2025

Wednesday 28 May 2025
Ben Packham
The Australian


 Anthony Albanese has been urged to leverage an offer by a US private equity  firm to buy the Port of Darwin to deliver an ultimatum to its Chinese owner -  sell the facility or have it seized by the government.
 
 As The Australian revealed on Tuesday, New York-based Cerberus Capital  Management is preparing a formal proposal to buy the port from Landbridge  Group's billionaire Chinese owner, Ye Cheng.
 
 James Paterson, the opposition's former home affairs spokesman who is in line  for a senior national security role, said the Prime Minister needed to act  after he gazumped Peter Dutton's election pledge to strip Land-bridge of its  99-year lease over the port.
 
 "After flip-flopping on the Port of Darwin for years, Mr Albanese  finally copied the Coalition's homework during the election campaign and  promised to restore it to Australian control," Senator Paterson said.  "Now there is at least one willing buyer,
 
 "Labor must ensure the lease is transferred to an Australian-government  approved operator.
 
 "If the Landbridge Group is unwilling to facilitate the sale on  commercial terms, the Prime Minister must use the commonwealth's significant  constitutional powers to ensure a sale occurs."
 
 Mr Albanese pledged on Darwin radio during the election campaign that Labor  would return the facility to "Australian hands" by securing a buyer  or bringing it back under public ownership.
 
 The move came less than 24 hours after Mr Dutton was due to announce the  Coalition would forcibly acquire the port's lease if it was not sold within  six months of the election.
 
 Senator Paterson said while Cerberus Capital Management was not an Australian  company, it would be an acceptable buyer under Australia's foreign investment  rules. "Any buyer from Australia, or a strategic ally like the US that  can receive Foreign Investment Review Board approval, would be preferable to  the Land-bridge Group," he said.
 
 Former Defence Department deputy secretary Peter Jennings said the US firm's  offer for the port was a "golden opportunity" for the Prime  Minister to "quickly liberate" the port from its Chinese owner.  "The Albanese government should be rejoicing if Cerberus is interested  in taking over the Port of Darwin," he writes in The Australian.  "Darwin can become a strong part of a regional deterrence strategy  focused on dampening Chinese military adventurism."
 
 Cerberus Capital Management met last week with Landbridge Group, Northern  Territory Treasurer Bill Yan and Labor MP for Solomon Luke Gosling to discuss  its proposal to buy the port.
 
 Mr Gosling, who campaigned heavily on Labor's plan to return the port to  Australian control, declined to comment on Tuesday.
 
 Cerberus Capital Management has close ties to the Trump administration, with  its co-founder Steve Feinberg now serving as the US Deputy Defence Secretary.
 
 It's understood the investment firm's offer will be slightly above the $506m  Landbridge paid 10 years ago for its 99-year lease over the facility. The  company says the facility is not for sale, but one source said the port  operator was open to offers of about $1bn.

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