From causing a major phone outage to shutting down street lights across parks, suburbs and roads, copper theft has become a clear public safety risk.
Copper theft is hitting building sites, street lights - and now phones. How do we stop it?
From causing a major phone outage to shutting down street lights across parks, suburbs and roads, copper theft has become a clear public safety risk.
Last week, Optus said a phone and mobile data outage that affected more than 14,000 people across south-east Melbourne was triggered by thieves trying to steal copper - and accidentally cutting the wrong cable.
Across the border, last month the South Australia government introduced a bill to crack down on scrap metal theft, particularly copper. That followed more than 2,000 scrap metal thefts from building sites in 2023-24, costing an estimated A$70 million a year - just in one state.
But why are people stealing copper? And what's being done to stop it?


















































