In this week's hard copy edition of WA Business News:
Janelle Macri discovers a market divided in two when she meets the movers and shakers of Perth's tourism industry, and discovers how a geotechnical materials service company retains staff.
Mark Beyer discovers how a shortage of gas supplies could make Griffin Group the dominant electricity generator in WA and takes a walk around Curtin University's new resources precinct.
Julie-anne Sprague examines China's growing taste for WA wine, and looks around new apartments developed in Koombana Bay's heritage-listed wheat silos.
Jenelle Carter asks if the trend of slim-line office towers has come to an end, and checks out soaring industrial rents, and
Emily Piesse looks at the impact the Esperance port closure has had on other WA ports, and discovers the benefits of diverse board memberships at not-for-profit organisations.
Our Book of Lists continues the list of WA's top industrial public companies
Editor Mark Pownall reflects on Daylight Saving and the AFL fallout,
Tim Treadgold wonders whether the WA boom might just continue for another decade;
And Joe Poprzeczny asks whether a California-style recall election might help WA politics.
All this and more in this week's edition of WA Business News, available tomorrow.