At the
2011 G20 Cannes summit, then-Prime Minister
Julia Gillard was asked to have Australia host the 2014 summit. Brisbane was selected over the much larger Sydney because
Brisbane Airport was better equipped to cater to significant increases in plane arrivals. Additionally, the
Sydney Convention & Exhibition Centre would be undertaking renovations at the time. The
Parliament of Queensland passed the
G20 (Safety and Security) Act 2013 on 29 October 2013. The event involved a complex security operation. Event organisers needed to ensure that appropriate security measures were in place to protect visitors, while minimising disruptions to inner-city residents and businesses. About 6,000 police from Queensland, wider Australia and New Zealand ensured security at the event, and more than 600 volunteers provided assistance at the summit. Roads between the central business district and the Brisbane Airport were temporarily closed. Around 1,500 security specialists including interstate and overseas personnel together with thousands of Queensland police made patrols. Public transport services were reduced in the central business district and surrounding suburbs. One wing in a major Brisbane hospital was reserved for the exclusive use of world leaders during the summit. A secure, government
wireless network was required for public safety communications during the summit. Telstra established the network in Brisbane, the
Gold Coast and
Cairns before the event and later continued rolling it out across
South East Queensland. The Australian Government rented 16 bombproof
Mercedes Benz S-Guard limousines specially for the summit at a cost of
AU$1.8 million. Some world leaders however, including
Barack Obama and
Vladimir Putin planned to bring their own vehicles. 800 people were involved in a security exercise, which tested responses to security issues, crowd management and transport for over 10 hours on 6 October 2014. Actors portraying delegates were used, which involved a mock world leader arriving from a
Qantas Boeing 737-800 at Brisbane Airport into a 13-vehicle
motorcade consisting of police motorbikes, police cars, sedans, vans, an
SUV and a
ute, which travelled from the airport to a Brisbane hotel. The cost of hosting the event was estimated at around AU$400 million. ==Associated meetings==