As Senior Editor at Business News, Mark Beyer has a wide-ranging brief to research, analyse and report on the issues, trends and personalities affecting the business community in Western Australia.
Mr Beyer has 35 years' career experience, primarily in business journalism. He joined Business News in 2002 and previously worked for The Australian Financial Review and The West Australian, and also has public relations and corporate affairs experience.
Before becoming a journalist, he was an economist with the Commonwealth Treasury in Canberra.
Western Australia is on the brink of a $1 billion investment boom in new power stations, with up to six projects likely to be under construction or formally committed by the end of this year.
Moves by Perth’s regional councils into waste processing have run into further problems with the Western Metropolitan Regional Council the latest to experience a setback.
One year after buying the Integrated Power Services joint venture from Halliburton and Western Power, Anthony Wooles has firmed up plans to turn the local company into a national operator and maintainer of energy assets.
New State Development and Energy Minister Alan Carpenter is looking to Queensland for his ‘big picture’ vision for Western Australia. He spoke to Mark Beyer.
Premier Geoff Gallop has won his second election, his parliamentary majority is intact, and he has refreshed his ministry with a modest reshuffle and five new faces.
The Federal Government’s plan to establish a unitary industrial relations system has been condemned by the union movement and Labor state governments but, more surprisingly, has gained a mixed response from business groups.
When Indonesia’s Aceh province was devastated by the Asian tsunami last December, one organisation that moved quickly to respond was the little-known RedR Australia.
Fears that oil and gas giant Woodside could import the entire process plant for its $2 billion phase five expansion project are causing increasing concern within the State Government and among local industry players.
Business groups want skills training, industrial relations reform and budget policy at the top of the Gallop Government’s second-term policy agenda. Mark Beyer reports.
Both major political parties may now resolutely embrace presidential-style campaigning by thrusting their leaders at voters but, at rock bottom, contemporary election campaigns are encounters between party-hired advertising agencies.
The 20 largest engineering firms in Western Australia increased staff numbers by 25 per cent last year on the back of booming investment in resource and infrastructure projects.
Cynics often complain that government is much the same whichever party wins office, but this state election campaign has thrown up stark differences between the two major parties.
Increasing risk and liability is the biggest issue facing the engineering profession in Western Australia, closely followed by the growing shortage of skilled engineers, according to the two people leading the profession in the state.
BHP Billiton and Woodside have highlighted the prospect of a sustained resources boom in Western Australia by listing future projects in the region worth nearly $8 billion.
Competition between Western Australia’s two biggest IT services companies could be even livelier than usual in future after an executive shuffle between Unisys West and Computer Sciences Corporation.
Western Pacific Financial Group is looking to expand its financial planning and investment operations after completing $50 million of asset sales and buying out its founding shareholders.
The Australian Securities and Investment Commission has launched an investigation into the affairs of Kevin Pollock, nearly two years after National Australia Bank appointed receivers to 14 of Mr Pollock’s companies.
The amount of work flowing to local industry on the North West Shelf venture’s next big expansion will be substantially cut after project operator Woodside opted for a fundamentally new approach to engineering and procurement
West Perth mining companies are usually run by one of two types – the accountants who never get their hands dirty and the operators who’ve seen it all first hand.
Private sector bids for key power and water projects in Western Australia face an uncertain future if the Coalition wins government at this month’s election, but they are not without hope.
Eight years ago, former trucking and mining contractor Michael Kiernan found himself about $2.5 million out of pocket when manganese miner Valiant Consolidated collapsed.
The latest statistical snapshot of the small business sector has highlighted the emergence over the past decade of home-based businesses, which account for 72 per cent of the 139,500 small businesses in Western Australia.
The State Coalition has focused on reducing costs, cutting red tape and reforming industrial relations in its small business policy released this week.