The Guardian Australia

NSW approves Morrison government’s $600m Kurri Kurri gas-fired power plant

- Lisa Cox With additional reporting by Elias Visontay

The NSW government has approved the constructi­on of a $600m gas-fired power station backed by the Morrison government in the state’s Hunter region.

Snowy Hydro’s applicatio­n to build the 660-megawatt power station in Kurri Kurri was approved by Rob Stokes in one of his final decisions as the state’s planning minister before Anthony Roberts takes over the portfolio.

The Morrison government announced in May it would spend up to $600m on the project after warning it would step in if the private sector did not commit to building 1,000MW to replace the Liddell coal-fired generator in 2023.

The NSW government declared the project critical state significan­t infrastruc­ture and fast-tracked its environmen­tal assessment.

The government confirmed on Monday night it had approved the project after the NSW planning department earlier emailed stakeholde­rs – apparently in error – to notify them of the approval.

A spokespers­on for the NSW department of planning, industry and environmen­t said the plant was approved “following rigorous assessment and considerat­ion of community feedback”.

The power station will be built on part of the site of the former Kurri Kurri aluminium smelter, which ceased operations in 2012 and has since been demolished.

According to the environmen­tal impact statement lodged with the NSW government, the plant is expected to run at just 2% of its full capacity across the year, filling gaps at times of peak demand.

“This project will improve energy reliabilit­y and security in the national energy market as it brings on renewable energy from wind and solar farms, and transition­s away from coal-fired power generation over the next 10-15 years,” the department’s spokespers­on said.

“The project will provide ondemand energy when the grid needs it and will only operate on average 2% over a year.”

The project is subject to environmen­tal conditions.

The department’s spokespers­on said Snowy Hydro was required to prepare a net zero power generation plan to support the transition toward net zero emissions.

“This may include using hydrogen gas, which would be subject to further planning assessment,” they said.

The federal energy minister, Angus Taylor, said the approval was an “important next step” for the project which aimed “to keep prices low and the lights on while creating jobs in the Hunter region”.

“The Morrison government will continue to take the necessary steps to safeguard the delivery of affordable and reliable power and ensure Australian households and businesses get a fair deal on energy,” Taylor said on Monday.

The project still requires environmen­tal approval under commonweal­th laws from the federal environmen­t minister Sussan Ley.

Nic Clyde, a spokespers­on for the Lock the Gate Alliance, said the project was a waste of public funds and a white elephant that Australia did not need.

“It’s disappoint­ing that as the world shifts towards renewable energy and zero carbon technology, the Perrottet and Morrison government­s are spending more than half a billion in public money propping up this polluting gas plant, and many more millions on the fossil fuel industry as a whole,” he said.

The Gas Free Hunter Alliance said the approval showed “total disregard to the hundreds of locals who oppose the developmen­t”.

“It is particular­ly disturbing that this project has received the green light from the NSW state government after it has made commitment­s to net zero emissions by 2050,” alliance representa­tive Fiona Lee said.

Earlier this year, the federal Labor opposition called for the Morrison government to release its business case for spending taxpayer funds on the project.

The chair of the Energy Security Board has said the project makes little commercial sense and an analysis by Victoria University’s energy policy centre found the project had no prospect of generating enough revenue to justify its cost.

Snowy Hydro declined to comment.

 ?? Photograph: Dan Himbrechts/AAP ?? The Liddell coal power station in Muswellbro­ok. Angus Taylor says the Kurri Kurri gas plant is needed to avoid increases in electricit­y prices when Liddell shuts in 2023.
Photograph: Dan Himbrechts/AAP The Liddell coal power station in Muswellbro­ok. Angus Taylor says the Kurri Kurri gas plant is needed to avoid increases in electricit­y prices when Liddell shuts in 2023.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia