CSIRO Faces Major Job Cuts Amidst Australia's Science Sector Funding Crisis
November 21, 2025
The broader political debate centers on whether new science leadership will implement reforms to revive Australia’s research ecosystem under a renewed funding commitment.
A one-time $459 million four-year boost from 2020 helped COVID-19 efforts but expired in 2024, leaving CSIRO with an operating deficit and a maintenance backlog of aging facilities.
Researchers describe the current environment as a 'gig economy' for science, with long grant cycles and rolling contracts hampering stable research work.
Australia’s science sector is facing sustained funding cuts as CSIRO announces up to 350 more research job losses, adding to a wave of about 800 cuts over 18 months across a 6,000-strong workforce.
The CSIRO's sweeping layoffs—roughly 10% of its science staff—are part of a restructuring to align with the government’s priorities and address a funding gap, with most reductions in environment, health, and biosecurity teams.
Industry voices warn that under-investment in R&D is a national risk, threatening talent, infrastructure, and breakthroughs as funding declines relative to GDP.
Funding instability is exemplified by large projects like the Stawell Underground Physics Laboratory facing delays amid broader investment challenges.
Critical programs in climate intelligence, net zero, biodiversity, human health, and disease preparedness are facing reductions or relocation, prompting concern about national scientific capacity.
Former and current senior staff allege mismanagement, claiming temporary funding was wasted on transient projects and a lack of a coherent, sustainable strategy increased operating costs.
Industry figures warn that continued underfunding could erode Australia’s leadership in biodiversity, climate science, and public health preparedness, despite acknowledging the agency’s past innovations.
Australia spends about 0.36% of GDP on research, well below the OECD average of 0.73%, highlighting systemic underfunding compared with international peers.
CSIRO leadership and government spokespeople argue the savings are prudent reprioritisations, noting operating costs rose faster than inflation and aging infrastructure and benefits are driving the change.
Summary based on 3 sources
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Sources

The Guardian • Nov 21, 2025
Climate of fear: are CSIRO’s sweeping job cuts a sign Australia doesn’t care about the extinction crisis?
ABC News • Nov 19, 2025
The CSIRO cuts are just the tip of the iceberg for Australia's science funding
The Sydney Morning Herald • Nov 22, 2025
‘It made me sick’: CSIRO job cuts due to waste, not underfunding, ex-senior staff say