Australia

Vestas receives orders from Hydro Tasmania in Australia

Vestas will provide 56 units of the V90-3.0 MW wind turbine for the Musselroe Wind Farm project.

Vestas receives orders from Hydro Tasmania in Australia

Vestas will provide 56 units of the V90-3.0 MW wind turbine for the Musselroe Wind Farm project.

Australia's wave energy system gets funding

The 250kW bioWAVE ocean wave energy system in Victoria, Australia has been awarded conditional funding support of $5 million.

Incentives to be launched for large-scale solar projects in Australia

Australian Capital Territory is launching a new incentive scheme to promote large-scale solar in the state to help install projects totalling up to 210MW.

S&P:Austalia's carbon tax to push polluters to change portfolio mix

Standard & Poor's Ratings Services said that there was no immediate impact on its ratings on Australian utility companies following Australia's carbon tax legislation to be implemented from July 1, 2012.

Wind power left out of Australia's clean energy funding?

More than A$13 billion in government funds may be invested by Australia for clean energy that could boost large solar power stations.

First Solar starts construction on Australian 10MW PV farm

First Solar has begun construction on what will be Australia’s first utility-scale PV project.

Carbon tax to be implemented in Australia from July 2012

The tax would start from A$23 per ton and would increase by 5% annually.

Australia CO2 scheme must be scrapped, opposition says

Australia's main opposition party vowed on Monday to repeal a carbon pricing scheme expected to become law next month as a key plank for polls due by 2013, threatening to prolong uncertainty in energy investments. "We will absolutely deliver on our mandate. So the first thing we'll do is we'll seek a mandate for repeal," Greg Hunt, opposition climate change minister, said in an interview. Labor Party Prime Minister Julia Gillard, who lags the opposition Liberal Party in opinion polls, has staked her minority government's future on sweeping economic reform such as taxes on mining and carbon. But voters have been concerned over industry fears the plan to tax carbon emissions will lead to higher costs and job losses, prompting Liberal Party leader Tony Abbott to announce a "blood oath" to repeal the scheme should his party and partners win the next election. The government on Monday labeled the repeal pledge absurd, underscoring the divisive nature of plans to fight climate change by pricing carbon emissions in Australia, the United States and elsewhere. "Of all the blatantly absurd claims we have heard from Abbott in recent months, this 'blood oath' on carbon pricing is the least credible and the most hysterical," Climate Change Minister Greg Combet wrote in a commentary in The Australian newspaper on Monday. "The investment community knows that if Abbott's threat were ever realized it would increase sovereign risk. Consequently, Australia would suffer as an investment destination." The program will impose a carbon tax on around 500 of the country's biggest polluters from July 2012, before moving to a carbon trade scheme in 2015. It also includes more than A$13 billion in support for green energy investments, compensation for households against higher prices and firms that export goods to countries without carbon costs. The Senate began discussing the package of bills on Monday. A vote is expected by late next week and the government, backed by the Greens, has a majority in the Senate. PROFOUND CONCERN Hunt said the opposition would fight on with their own scheme, despite failing to scuttle the government's program. "I deal with Australian business each day and there is a huge body of deep profound concern about the impact of the tax, particularly since it is an electricity tax," Hunt said in a telephone interview from Canberra. "It's not difficult to repeal. All that happens is that people stop paying the tax." The opposition backs a scheme that rewards polluters for low-cost steps to cut emissions from business-as-usual levels but the government and some policy analysts say a national cost on carbon is needed to drive change in investment. Combet labeled the opposition policy a fantasy but the ongoing bickering and uncertainty could delay investment decisions needed to achieve a 5 percent cut in emissions by 2020 from 2000 levels. "Everyone is just keeping their options open while all this political uncertainty plays outs," said Tony Wood, leader of the energy program at the Grattan Institute in Melbourne, an independent think tank. He said a stable outlook for carbon prices could trigger investment in high-efficiency gas power plants. "In the absence of that, other things happen, which are almost certainly either higher costs or more of a threat to security to supply and I think it most likely to be a threat to cost," he told Reuters. Reuters  

Green Rock to develop Australian geothermal exploration permits

Green Rock Energy has entered into an agreement to develop geothermal exploration permits in the North Perth Basin, Western Australia.

Hong Kong group plans $3.7B gas power plants in Australia

TRUenergy is seeking approval to develop two gas-fired power stations in Queensland, Australia, with total investment of up to A$3.6 billion or $3.76 billion. The firm is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Hong Kong-based China Light and Power Holdings.

Emerson Network Power clinches $100m contract in Australia

Emerson will design, supply, install and commission 10 network facilities centres for Australia’s National Broadband Network.

Vestas ships first 14 V112-3.0 MW wind turbines to Australia

The 420MW Macarthur Wind Farm is Vestas’ first major order for the new V112-3.0MW wind turbine.

Gillard to lead carbon cap revival in Australia

The Australian prime minister plans to make factories either cut the nation’s greenhouse gases or pay for pollution-curbing programs abroad, according to a Bloomberg report.

Suzlon to construct $1.3bn wind farm in Australia

Suzlon Energy is set to build a 600MW wind power farm at 20km South-West of Ardrossan on the East Coast of the Yorke Peninsula in South Australia.

Clean energy firms seek Australia's renewable energy grants

Carnegie Wave Energy, Panax Geothermal Ltd. and Petratherm Ltd. are among companies planning to apply for A$126 million or $131 million of Australian government funding for renewable energy projects.

Victoria also to suffer reduction in feed-in-tariff

The state of Victoria’s premium feed-in tariff will be phased out through an interim programme, which will commence once Victoria meets its current capacity cap of 100MW.