Mercury (Hobart)

Wind farms power up jobs

- BLAIR RICHARDS and HELEN KEMPTON

TASMANIA is taking steps to become the nation’s green power battery with a massive wind farm project in the Central Highlands given a green light and another on the West Coast imminent.

The State Government, Aurora and Chinese turbine manufactur­er Goldwind have reached an in-principle agreement for the $300 million, 49turbine wind farm to be developed at Wild Cattle Hill in the Central Highlands. Work is expected to start in September.

Energy Minister Matthew Groom said the project would create 150 jobs during constructi­on and about 10 jobs when completed in 2020.

“The wind farm will generate 144 MW, enough to power over 60,000 homes and increase wind generation capacity in Tasmania by nearly 50 per cent,” Mr Groom said.

He said he hoped to make an announceme­nt soon about an exciting proposal for Granville Harbour.

“We have a tremendous opportunit­y to capitalise on the building momentum for more

renewable energy generation and the Hodgman Government is seizing it.’’

The project, near Lake Echo, will enable Tasmania to meet its national Renewable Energy Target.

The Granville Harbour wind project would create about 200 jobs in constructi­on and another 40-50 wind tower manufactur­ing jobs at Haywards, in Launceston.

The Westcoast Wind pro- ject has been on the drawing board for several years and looked shaky during uncertaint­y at federal level over the Renewable Energy Target. But the mood in Canberra in relation to wind energy has changed significan­tly.

In Launceston in April, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull announced the Australian Renewable Energy Agency would contribute $2.5 million for a study into expanding Tasmania’s potential for producing and storing more hydro and wind power.

Mr Turnbull said some of the new wind farms Australia needed would be built in Tasmania and the state could store the electricit­y generated by new projects on the mainland.

He said a second Bass Strait interconne­ctor cable to transport more power to the mainland would be vital to the energy plan.

Goldwind says its Cattle Hill Wind Farm would benefit from a second interconne­ctor and many other Tasmanian projects could be realised if it was built.

Opposition energy spokesman Scott Bacon congratula­ted Goldwind on striking a deal with Aurora.

“We’ve been arguing for the Government to be proactive when it comes to renewable energy projects. This is the first significan­t renewable energy project announced in this term of government,” he said.

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