Wind Map of Australia 2021
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Report: the Social and Economic Impact of Rural Wind Farms
The Senate Community Affairs References Committee The Social and Economic Impact of Rural Wind Farms June 2011 © Commonwealth of Australia 2011 ISBN 978-1-74229-462-9 Printed by the Senate Printing Unit, Parliament House, Canberra. MEMBERSHIP OF THE COMMITTEE 43rd Parliament Members Senator Rachel Siewert, Chair Western Australia, AG Senator Claire Moore, Deputy Chair Queensland, ALP Senator Judith Adams Western Australia, LP Senator Sue Boyce Queensland, LP Senator Carol Brown Tasmania, ALP Senator the Hon Helen Coonan New South Wales, LP Participating members Senator Steve Fielding Victoria, FFP Secretariat Dr Ian Holland, Committee Secretary Ms Toni Matulick, Committee Secretary Dr Timothy Kendall, Principal Research Officer Mr Terence Brown, Principal Research Officer Ms Sophie Dunstone, Senior Research Officer Ms Janice Webster, Senior Research Officer Ms Tegan Gaha, Administrative Officer Ms Christina Schwarz, Administrative Officer Mr Dylan Harrington, Administrative Officer PO Box 6100 Parliament House Canberra ACT 2600 Ph: 02 6277 3515 Fax: 02 6277 5829 E-mail: [email protected] Internet: http://www.aph.gov.au/Senate/committee/clac_ctte/index.htm iii TABLE OF CONTENTS MEMBERSHIP OF THE COMMITTEE ...................................................................... iii ABBREVIATIONS .......................................................................................................... vii RECOMMENDATIONS ................................................................................................. ix CHAPTER -
Bowmans Creek Wind Farm Scoping Report | May 2019 I Bowmans Creek Wind Farm
Bowmans Creek Wind Farm Scoping Report | May 2019 i Bowmans Creek Wind Farm Document Information Details Title Bowmans Creek Wind Farm Scoping Report Filename BOW Scoping Report Rev1 Purpose Scoping Report and Preliminary Environmental Assessment to accompany Application and Request for SEARs nit Revision Date Prepared by Reviewed by Approved by 0 13 Mar 2019 Julian Kasby Andrew Wilson Andrew Wilson 1 18 Apr 2019 Julian Kasby Andrew Wilson Andrew Wilson 2 9 May 2019 Julian Kasby Andrew Wilson Andrew Wilson May 2019 ii Bowmans Creek Wind Farm Table of Contents 1 INTRODUCTION 1 1.1 Background 1 1.2 Proponent 1 1.2.1 Wind Energy in NSW 1 1.2.2 Solar Energy in Australia 2 1.3 Document Purpose 4 2 PLANNING FRAMEWORK 5 2.1 State Legislation 5 2.1.1 Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979 5 2.1.2 State Environmental Planning Policy (State and Regional Development) 2011 5 2.1.3 State Environmental Planning Policy (Infrastructure) 2007 5 2.1.4 Other State Environmental Planning Policies 5 2.1.5 Other Legislation 6 2.2 Local Planning Regulations 6 2.2.1 Muswellbrook Local Environmental Plan 6 2.2.2 Singleton Local Environmental Plan 6 2.2.3 Upper Hunter Local Environmental Plan 7 2.2.4 Other Relevant Policies 7 2.3 Federal Legislation 8 2.3.1 Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act (1999) 8 2.3.2 Native Title Act 1993 9 3 PROJECT DESCRIPTION 10 3.1 Site Context 10 3.2 Project Overview 10 3.2.1 Wind Turbines 12 3.2.2 Electrical Connections 12 3.2.3 Other Associated Infrastructure 12 3.2.4 Minor Local Road Upgrades 12 3.2.5 -
Zielmarktanalyse Australien
www.exportinitiative.bmwi.de (A) Bereich für Bild AUSTRALIEN Energieeffiziente Lösungen für Infrastrukturentwicklung und Verkehr Zielmarktanalyse 2019 mit Profilen der Marktakteure www.german-energy-solutions.de Impressum Herausgeber German-Australian Chamber of Industry and Commerce Deutsch-Australische Industrie- und Handelskammer 8 Spring Street, Level 6 Sydney NSW 2000 Telefon: +61 2 8296 0400 E-Mail: [email protected] Webseite: www.germany-australia.com.au Stand 10.04.2019 Bildnachweis AHK Australien Redaktion Anja Kegel Director Consulting Services, Projects [email protected] Jürgen Wallstabe Consultant, Consulting Services, Projects [email protected] Mareile Teegen Consultant, Consulting Services, Projects & GTAI [email protected] Inhaltsverzeichnis I Tabellen 3 II Abbildungen 3 III Abkürzungen 4 1 Zusammenfassung 5 2 Länderprofil 6 2.1 Politischer Hintergrund 6 2.2 Wirtschaft, Struktur und Entwicklung 7 2.2.1 Aktuelle wirtschaftliche Lage 7 2.2.2 Außenhandel 8 2.2.3 Wirtschaftliche Beziehungen zu Deutschland 9 2.2.4 Investitionsklima und -förderung 9 3 Der Energiemarkt in Australien 10 3.1 Energieverbrauch 10 3.1.1 Energiebedarf und Aufteilung nach Sektoren 10 3.1.2 Energiequellen 12 3.1.3 Stromerzeugung und -verbrauch 13 3.2 Energiepreise 15 3.2.1 Strompreise 15 3.2.2 Gaspreise 15 3.2.3 Treibstoffpreise 16 3.3 Gesetzliche Rahmenbedingungen 17 3.4 Aktuelle Entwicklungen auf dem Energiemarkt 18 4 Energieeffiziente Lösungen für Infrastrukturentwicklung und Verkehr 21 4.1 Australische Trends mit -
Community Information Booklet
Community Information Booklet capitalbattery.com.au Gina Zheng, Project Manager [email protected] 1800 966 216 CONTENTS About Neoen 1 South Australia’s Big Battery 2 Delivering cheaper energy 3 Contribution to the Capital 5 What does a battery look like? 7 Project lifecycle 8 What can a battery do? 9 Facts & Figures 11 Choosing the site 12 Managed & operated in Canberra 13 Community Co-investment 14 FAQs 15 GLOBALLY The company is headquartered in Paris, EUROPE & AFRICA France, and has two Australian offices – in Finland Sydney and Canberra. AMERICAS Ireland USA France We operate across renewable energy Mexico Portugal technologies including solar, wind and storage El Salvador Zambia in Europe, Central America, Africa, the Middle Jamaica AUSTRALIA Mozambique East and Australia. Ecuador Australia Colombia Neoen’s total capacity in operation and under Argentina construction is currently over 3 GW and we are aiming for more than 5GW by 2021. LOCALLY Neoen Australia began operations in DeGrussa Solar and Storage Project Western Downs 2012. Over the last eight years the Green Power Hub company has initiated the development Dubbo Solar Hub Hornsdale Wind Farms 1, 2, 3 Parkes Solar Farm of more than 1.5GW of solar and wind Hornsdale Power Reserve Griffith Solar Farm projects through organic growth, local Coleambally Solar Farm partnerships and strategic acquisitions. Bulgana Green Power Hub Numurkah Solar Farm Neoen produce clean electricity from renewable sources such as sunlight and wind using mature, tried and tested technologies. -
White Rock Wind and Solar Farm
WHITE ROCK Solar Farm NEWSLETTER AUGUST 2017 WHITE ROCK WHITE ROCK Wind Farm Solar Farm Turning the first sod at the White Rock Solar Farm project site. From the left: Acting Mayor of Inverell Shire Council - Cr Anthony Michael, Vice President Investment of Goldwind Australia - Mr Ning Chen, Deputy Prime Minister and Member for New England - Mr Barnaby Joyce, Managing Director of Goldwind Australia - Mr John Titchen, Mayor of Glen Innes Severn Council – Cr Steve Toms. Welcome to the second combined White Rock Wind Farm and White Rock What’s happening? Solar Farm newsletter. This newsletter White Rock Wind Farm switches on turbines The first turbines at White Rock Wind Farm have now been provides information and updates connected to TransGrid’s network and are producing electricity. about both projects. Newsletters will NSW transmission network operator and manager TransGrid, continue to be distributed regularly along with sub-contractor Zinfra, designed, constructed and commissioned White Rock Wind Farm’s 33/132 kV substation and as the projects progress and milestones transmission line to connect the project to the NSW transmission are achieved. network and the National Electricity Market. The 175 megawatt (MW) White Rock Wind Farm White Rock Solar Farm Ground-Breaking Ceremony is in the New England Tablelands approximately On Monday 10 July, a Ground-Breaking Ceremony was held 20 km west of Glen Innes and 40 km east of Inverell. on the solar farm project site to celebrate the start of Stage 1 will consist of 70 wind turbines along with the construction. related civil and electrical infrastructure. The project is expected to be fully operational by late-2017. -
Clean Energy Fact Sheet We All Want Affordable, Reliable and Clean Energy So We Can Enjoy a Good Quality of Life
Clean Energy fact sheet We all want affordable, reliable and clean energy so we can enjoy a good quality of life. This fact sheet sets out how we’re leading a transition from fossil fuels to cleaner forms of energy. Background Minimising or, where we can, avoiding financial EnergyAustralia is one of the country’s biggest hardship is part of the challenge as we transition generators of power from fossil fuels. Each to cleaner generation. We need to do this while preserving the reliability of supply. +800 MW year we produce around 20 million tonnes Rights to of greenhouse gases, mostly carbon dioxide Our approach involves supporting the renewable energy or CO₂, from burning coal and gas to supply development of clean energy while helping our electricity to our 2.4 million accounts across customers manage their own consumption so eastern Australia. they use less energy. Because when they do For around a century, coal-fired power plants that, they generate fewer emissions and they ~$3B have provided Australians with reliable and save money. Long term affordable power and supported jobs and renewable Supporting renewable energy agreements economic development. The world is changing with fossil fuel generation being replaced by Right now, EnergyAustralia has the rights to lower emissions technologies. more than 800 MW worth of renewable energy, combining solar and wind farm power purchase The way we generate, deliver and use energy agreements, and we half-own the Cathedral 7.5% has to change. As a big emitter of carbon, it’s Rocks wind farm. Of large-scale up to us to lead the transition to cleaner energy wind and solar in a way that maintains that same reliable and project in the NEM affordable access to energy for everyone. -
Legislative Assembly
New South Wales Legislative Assembly PARLIAMENTARY DEBATES (HANSARD) Fifty-Seventh Parliament First Session Wednesday, 5 August 2020 Authorised by the Parliament of New South Wales TABLE OF CONTENTS Business of the House ............................................................................................................................. 3309 Suspension of Standing and Sessional Orders: BILLS ...................................................................... 3309 Bills ......................................................................................................................................................... 3309 Adoption Legislation Amendment (Integrated Birth Certificates) Bill 2020 ..................................... 3309 First Reading ................................................................................................................................... 3309 Second Reading Speech .................................................................................................................. 3309 Personal Injury Commission Bill 2020 ............................................................................................... 3314 State Revenue Legislation Amendment (COVID-19 Housing Response) Bill 2020 ......................... 3314 Returned .......................................................................................................................................... 3314 Defamation Amendment Bill 2020 .................................................................................................... -
Renewable Energy Buyers Forum
Renewable Energy Buyers Forum - Brisbane - Sponsored by: DLA Piper Thursday 26th July 2018 Chair: Ben Waters Welcome Jackie McKeon, WWF-Australia Business Renewables Centre - Australia Kate Papailiou, DLA Piper Update from DLA Piper Andrew Burnett, Department of Natural Resources, Mining & Renewable Energy in Queensland Energy, Queensland (DNRME) James Eskdale, Mars GloBal Corporate Mars Enters the Solar System Michael Wheelahan, Victorian Government Department of Intelligent Water Networks (IWN) Aggregation Environment, Land, Water and Planning (DELWP) Simon Crock, Sunshine Coast Council Sunshine Coast Council Solar Farm PPA Roger Price, WindLaB Optimising the renewable energy mix in Queensland Mantas Aleks, WePower Innovative purchasing model Ben Waters, Presync Discussion and wrap-up Networking Renewable Energy Buyers Forum Sponsored by: DLA Piper, Brisbane 26th July 2018 Business Renewable Centre - USA Business Renewable Centre - Australia • A not-for-profit, online Australian resource centre and market platform to accelerate Australian corporate uptake of large-scale renewable energy. • To help Australian organisations procure 1GW of renewable energy (installed capacity) by 2022 and 5GW by 2030. Primers & Guides for Industry… Business Renewable Centre - Australia Online Marketplace Platform Current and planned renewable energy projects Renewable Energy Buyers Forum Sponsored by: DLA Piper, Brisbane 26th July 2018 QLD’s 50% Renewable Energy Target WWF Renewable Energy Buyers Forum 26 July 2018 An evolving policy context As the energy -
Automate CP.Xlsm
FCAS Causer Pays Settlement Factors Issued: 10/12/2020 Period of Application: 27/12/2020 to 23/01/2021 Sample Period: 12:05AM, 8/11/2020 to 12:00AM, 6/12/2020 Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia and Tasmania Region Causer Pays Factors Scheduled and Semi-Scheduled Aggregations Factor AETV Pty Ltd 0.013562453 AGL Hydro Partnership 4.012190653 AGL Loy Yang Marketing Pty Ltd 0 AGL Macquarie Pty Limited 0 AGL PARF NSW Pty Ltd 2.310470219 AGL PARF QLD Pty Limited 0.46800389 AGL SA Generation Pty Limited 1.849553623 Alinta Energy Retail Sales Pty Ltd 0.449145117 Ararat Wind Farm Pty Ltd 0.875407241 Arrow Southern Generation Pty Ltd And Arrow Braemar 2 Pty Ltd 0.042579354 Boco Rock Wind Farm Pty Ltd 0.433630577 Bodangora Wind Farm Pty Limited 0.382480317 Bomen Solar Farm Pty Ltd As Trustee For Bomen SF Trust 0.556490672 Braemar Power Project Pty Ltd 0.706700821 Bulgana Wind Farm Pty Ltd 0.837111039 Callide Power Trading Pty Limited 0 Cherry Tree Wind Farm Pty Ltd As Trustee For The Cherry Tree Project Trust 0.156136526 Childers Solar Pty Ltd ATF The Childers Solar Trust 0.080755682 Clare Solar Farm Pty Ltd 0.651235137 CleanCo Queensland Limited 1.758098911 Clermont Asset Co Pty Ltd ATF Clermont Solar Unit Trust 0 Coleambally Solar Pty Ltd 1.111648664 Collector Wind Farm Pty Ltd 0.185651799 Crookwell Development Pty Ltd 0.401146682 CRWF Nominees Pty Ltd As Trustee For The CRWF Trust 0 CS Energy Limited 0 Darling Downs Solar Farm Pty Ltd 0.875202842 Darlington Point Solar Farm Pty Ltd 0.660040796 Daydream Solar Farm Pty Ltd As -
Energy Storage Report 2019
21 FEBRUARY 2019 n WWW.RENEWS.BIZ RANKED N°1 The transatlantic IN RELIABILITY law firm close FOR BESS to home FIND OUT MORE Find out more here ENERGY STORAGE REPORT 2019 Storage spark for renewables MADE IN GERMANY CONTENTS 21 February 2019 ENERGY STORAGE 02 UK 03–09 Battery overdrive he global installation of energy service markets, such as the balancing n Developers get creative storage is surging as costs mechanism, are now the name of Energy storage is continue to fall and regulators the game. n Pivot’s ambitious play T n Eelpower and Orsted set to deliver step up efforts to facilitate batteries to “There was a very significant growth n Council and EU salt cavern schemes flourishing as costs help balance growing volumes of in interest in storage, particularly after intermittent generation. the enhanced frequency response Figures compiled by reNEWS show auction, which seems to have peaked,” IRELAND/GERMANY 10–12 fall and regulations around 2.5GW of 1MW-plus storage is said Anthony Price, director at UK loosen in the drive to due online in major markets in 2019 storage consultancy Swanbarton. — more than double the around 1GW “It has turned into a more mature balance grids, writes deployed last year. This expansion is market with more sophisticated types led by the UK, Australia, the US and of investors who are doing it with their Tim Probert South Africa. eyes open,” he added. Storage developers believe the Nonetheless, UK installations are n DS3 capped tender finally launched technology is on an unstoppable path due to hit almost 600MW in 2019, n Brandenburg flagship blueprint as renewables-plus-storage solutions which would top last year’s tally of n German power-to-gas nears reality become increasingly competitive with 460MW. -
Renewable Energy Across Queensland's Regions
Renewable Energy across Queensland’s Regions July 2018 Enlightening environmental markets Green Energy Markets Pty Ltd ABN 92 127 062 864 2 Domville Avenue Hawthorn VIC 3122 Australia T +61 3 9805 0777 F +61 3 9815 1066 [email protected] greenmarkets.com.au Part of the Green Energy Group Green Energy Markets 1 Contents 1 Introduction ........................................................................................................................6 2 Overview of Renewable Energy across Queensland .....................................................8 2.1 Large-scale projects ..................................................................................................................... 9 2.2 Rooftop solar photovoltaics ........................................................................................................ 13 2.3 Batteries-Energy Storage ........................................................................................................... 16 2.4 The renewable energy resource ................................................................................................. 18 2.5 Transmission .............................................................................................................................. 26 3 The renewable energy supply chain ............................................................................. 31 3.1 Construction activity .................................................................................................................... 31 3.2 Equipment manufacture -
SEQ Retail Electricity Market Monitoring: 2017–18
Updated Market Monitoring Report SEQ retail electricity market monitoring: 2017–18 March 2019 We wish to acknowledge the contribution of the following staff to this report: Jennie Cooper, Karan Bhogale, Shannon Murphy, Thomas Gardiner & Thomas Höppli © Queensland Competition Authority 2019 The Queensland Competition Authority supports and encourages the dissemination and exchange of information. However, copyright protects this document. The Queensland Competition Authority has no objection to this material being reproduced, made available online or electronically but only if it is recognised as the owner of the copyright2 and this material remains unaltered. Queensland Competition Authority Contents Contents EXECUTIVE SUMMARY III THE ROLE OF THE QCA – TASK AND CONTACTS V 1 INTRODUCTION 1 1.1 Retail electricity market monitoring in south east Queensland 1 1.2 This report 1 1.3 Retailers operating in SEQ 1 2 PRICE MONITORING 3 2.1 Background 3 2.2 Minister's Direction 4 2.3 QCA methodology 4 2.4 QCA monitoring 6 2.5 Distribution non-network charges 45 2.6 Conclusion 47 3 DISCOUNTS, SAVINGS AND BENEFITS 48 3.1 Background 48 3.2 Minister's Direction 48 3.3 QCA methodology 48 3.4 QCA monitoring 49 3.5 Conclusion 96 4 RETAIL FEES 98 4.1 Background 98 4.2 Minister's Direction 98 4.3 QCA methodology 98 4.4 QCA monitoring 98 4.5 GST on fees 104 4.6 Fees that 'may' have applied 105 4.7 Additional fee information on Energy Made Easy 105 4.8 Conclusion 105 5 PRICE TRENDS 107 5.1 Minister's Direction 107 5.2 Data availability 107 5.3 QCA methodology