Fiji Sun

AU$1bn for Domestic Solar Panel Push

Investment to help cut Australia’s reliance on China

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Australia will invest AU$1billion (FJ$1.47bn) to ensure more solar panels are made domestical­ly, as the nation looks to reduce its dependence on imports from China.

The Solar Sunshot programme will offer production subsidies and grants to help Australia capture more of the global solar manufactur­ing supply chain, the government said.

While the nation has the highest uptake of rooftop solar in the world – with panels on one in three households – just 1 per cent of those have been made locally, it said. Australia’s rapid shift away from its ageing fleet of coal power stations and massive uptake of household solar has made it a test case for the global energy transition. The new programme follows similar moves by countries including the US and India in encouragin­g local supply, but may still struggle to push out manufactur­ers from China, which provide more than 90 per cent of Australia’s panels. “Australia should not be the last link in a global supply chain built on an Australian invention,” Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said in the release, referring to pioneering work on the technology at the University of New South Wales.

“We have every metal and critical mineral necessary to be a central player in the net zero transforma­tion and a proven track record as a reliable energy producer and exporter.”

Mr Albanese on Thursday visited the site of AGL Energy’s Liddell coal plant in the Hunter region north of Sydney.

The plant closed last year after more than half a century in a symbol of the transition.

AGL signed an agreement with SunDrive, an Australian startup backed by activist billionair­e Mike Cannon-Brookes, to explore the developmen­t of a solar manufactur­ing facility on the site, it said in a separate release.

Meanwhile, global solar supply is facing a crisis after the rapid expansion of plants outpaced demand and squeezed margins, Bloomberg NEF said in a report this month.

About US$78 billion (FJ$175.76bn) of surplus solar manufactur­ing capacity could be added to 2027, it said.

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