The curtain has come down on the Australian auto industry, but former workers are finding opportunities in the booming pharmaceuticals and medical technology sector. By Michelle McIntosh.

Assad Ibrahim worked in car manufacturing for 12 years. He started at Ford in Melbourne straight out of school when he was still a teenager, in the body shop, literally putting cars together. “The exterior, the side assembly, the hood, the bonnet, the works,” he says.

Assad did an apprenticeship for a trade in fitting and turning, and then also a diploma in engineering. He went on to work in project management at Ford, working with the newest manufacturing technology in a high-stakes, well-paid role.

Then the Australian automotive industry hit the skids. In Victoria, Toyota has now been reduced to a skeleton staff in Altona doing non-manufacturing roles. Ford stopped making cars in Victoria in 2016. Holden shut its last Australian plant, in Adelaide, last year. It had spanned nearly 100 years; the first Ford factory opened in Geelong in 1925.

The grand era was over.

“We all knew it was doom and gloom,” says Assad. “It was just a matter of when. It was heartbreaking. I put my heart and soul into the company and gave them so much. They gave me so much, too. But I knew I had to get out.”

Assad says he knew he needed to transition into another career, and boiled it down to three manufacturing industries in Melbourne: chemical, food, and pharmaceutical. He didn’t know much about any of them, but by now he knew a lot about manufacturing. He decided on the pharmaceutical industry.

Where the car industry slowed down then stalled, pharmaceutical manufacturing boomed. With medical technology manufacturing, it’s now worth almost $13bn in Victoria alone – close to half the state’s revenue from all manufacturing. It employs more than 20,000 people. Monash University’s Faculty of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences has established an enterprise called the Medicines Manufacturing Innovation Centre (MMIC), a joint venture between the University, the State Government and pharmaceutical manufacturers. The MMIC holds workshops where all stakeholders can be updated and informed on the links between the auto industry and the pharmaceutical industry. The pharmaceutical industry – and the MMIC – hope to attract an influx of degree-qualified former auto employees to fill the demand in the booming new sector.

Informed by the auto industry

Assad took a job at Pfizer, the huge pharmaceutical multinational with a significant set-up in Melbourne. He’s been there 10 years now, one of six who have migrated from the auto industry. His role now is packing and technology manager; he’s currently overseeing a packaging process idea potentially worth millions to the company.

Andrew Hodder, Pfizer’s Site Director at its Mulgrave manufacturing plant and an MMIC advisory board member, says his company, like others, always looks for ways to be more effective.

“We’re taking these colleagues from automotive into our environment and getting them trained up in the regulatory framework challenges and the way we do things,” says Hodder. “It helps us be more effective in the way we problem-solve and deal with the manufacturing line. We really take on board the things the auto industry has been very good at doing. We adopt them into our own manufacturing environment. They re-energise our existing workforce.”

Exports of pharmaceutical goods from Victoria rose nearly $1.5bn last year, with the growth driven by blood products to the US and medicines to China. The State Government has prioritised pharmaceutical and medical technology manufacturing as a ‘key priority growth’ sector.

Victoria’s Minister for Industry and Employment, Ben Carroll, says former auto workers have ’transferable skills that are ideally suited to pharmaceutical manufacturing’.

“We’ve always supported ex-auto workers to find new jobs, and by teaming up with global companies like Pfizer and universities like Monash, we’re helping to create even more career pathways.”

Monash’s Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences Associate Professor Michelle McIntosh is the director of MMIC. She says tertiary-qualified staff in project management, design, quality control, engineering, business and science are wanted. She says the similarities between the two industries are “not a connection that may be obvious. But we are trying to draw that out, through MMIC, and shine a light on it. It’s very much part of our mandate to train and develop a workforce of the future.”

For Assad Ibrahim, settled doing major projects at Pfizer’s plant, the transition has been successful.

“It was sad to see the auto industry go,” he says.“But the skills I got from it are incredible.”

Michelle McIntosh is an Associate Professor at the Faculty of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences at Monash University. Reprinted courtesy of Monash Lens.

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