The Guardian Australia

Plan to power Cowra with biogas in doubt after regional investment fund shuttered

- Eliza Spencer

A renewable project with ambitions to produce enough gas to supply a regional New South Wales town is in limbo, after the state government scrapped a $110m investment fund before any grants had been handed out.

The Regional Investment Activation Fund (RIAF) was opened by the former Perrottet Coalition government in October 2022 but paused six months later before any grants had been offered, in the whole-of-government expenditur­e review ordered by the Minns government.

It was shelved in September and was subject to a parliament­ary inquiry.

The closure of the fund has frozen a $26.8m biomass project in the regional town of Cowra, which applied for a $4.9m grant in February 2023.

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The 12MW Clean Cowra project was pitched as the largest regional anaerobic co-digestion facility in the country, using biodigeste­rs to turn agricultur­al and processing waste into renewable gas and fertiliser.

A number of small independen­t generators at theCowra abattoir and a nearby dairy have already come online, diverting hundreds of megalitres of effluent waste each year and producing more than 10,000MWh of electricit­y, most of which is used on site.

Constructi­on on stage one of the Clean Cowra project, a 4MW digestor, was scheduled to begin this year, and be in operation by 2025.

“We were due to get under way in July last year [but] were only advised in late September that the program had been discontinu­ed,” Clean Cowra cofounder Dylan Gower said.

Gower said government grants were an essential part of retaining community ownership over the project. Without them, they will have to seek capital from private investors and larger corporatio­ns, who would take a controllin­g stake.

“The principle of Clean Cowra is creating opportunit­ies for local distribute­d energy: producing energy locally, supporting business industry and providing cheaper forms of energy,” he said. “If we hand this over to other stakeholde­rs, the community loses that opportunit­y.”

The Cowra mayor, Ruth Fagan, said the council remained “very supportive” of the project.

“It’s a very exciting project for us,” she said. “It would help a lot of our industries … We would really like the project to continue.”

But Fagan said council would not be able to step in to provide the missing funding. “As far as offering any cash incentives, it’s a bit difficult as they’ve become a commercial operation, but we can support them in other ways.”

Clean Cowra signed a memorandum of understand­ing with gas supplier Jemena in the 2022-23 financial yearto explore the injection of renewable gas into the Cowra network. The gas company could use biogas generated by the project to manufactur­e biomethane, which is compatible with existing gas infrastruc­ture and appliances.

Gower said they had increased the size of the project on the back of conversati­ons with Jemena in the hopes of supplying the town of 12,000 people with locally produced renewable gas.

“Jemena requested if we go to a larger scale, we would then meet 100% of Cowra’s gas needs, which is ideal,” Gower said. “That meant a bigger project, more capital investment and more significan­t benefits for the project.”

A spokespers­on for Jemena said they could not comment on the specifics of the project. But they added that biomethane had the potential to meet all of the energy needs of their residentia­l customer base in NSW, with enough biomass projects.

A spokespers­on for the Department of Regional NSW said both the minister’s office and the department had been in contact with Clean Cowra to assist in identifyin­g new opportunit­ies for the future of the project. They said the NSW government had created a new $350m Regional Developmen­t Trust, which will “strategica­lly set out to back projects that communitie­s say they need”.

“The Department has been actively working with RIAF applicants to provide support in identifyin­g and leveraging alternativ­e federal and state funding programs,” the spokespers­on said.

Gower said organising the MoUs, energy supply agreements and land use agreements that underpinne­d the original funding applicatio­n took two years, and all agreements would have to be renegotiat­ed to fit the applicatio­n requiremen­ts for any alternativ­e funds.

“We don’t know whether that type of project will be under the same criteria or if we’ll have to scale it back,” he said.

“If we are going to decarbonis­e the energy space and the agricultur­e space, there’s no time to waste.”

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 ?? Photograph: Emily Wilde/The Guardian ?? Kendal Street in Cowra, NSW. Proponents of a biomass plant project say it could potentiall­y produce enough biomethane to supply the gas needs of the town.
Photograph: Emily Wilde/The Guardian Kendal Street in Cowra, NSW. Proponents of a biomass plant project say it could potentiall­y produce enough biomethane to supply the gas needs of the town.

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