The Guardian (USA)

Sun Cable’s giant Northern Territory solar project gets $210m funding boost

- Peter Hannam

The $30bn plan to build a giant solar farm in northern Australia to power Darwin, Indonesia and Singapore has moved a step closer to reality with billionair­es Mike Cannon-Brookes and Andrew Forrest contributi­ng to a $210m capital raising.

The investment brings to about $250m the money raised to build a 17gigawatt solar plant on a cattle property at Newcastle Waters, midway between Alice Springs and the Northern Territory’s capital.

The project would be a 12,000 hectare solar precinct with 17-20 GW solar generation and 36-42 GWh energy storage to enable 24/7 dispatchab­le electricit­y near Elliott, in the Northern Territory.

The funding “will take us all the way through to the financial close of the Australia-Asia PowerLink”, David Griffin, Sun Cable’s chief executive, said.

“It will also allow us to accelerate developmen­t of our broader portfolio,” he said. “Our mission is to supply renewable electricit­y from resourceab­undant regions to growing load centres at scale.”

The company plans to explore other “multi-gigawatt” solar plants both in Australia and elsewhere, including other interconti­nental power links, based on the know-how developed over the past four years, Griffin said. More details were likely to be announced “some months from now”.

“Some of our subsequent projects will also rely on [technology] very similar in concept to the first project,” he said. “There’s a lot of opportunit­ies in the original investors took up their full entitlemen­ts. Staff, who now number 80, also joined the list of shareholde­rs, Griffin said.

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“We’re just really stoked to close this round,” Griffin said. “It’s a really significan­t number and puts us in a really strong position.”

Cannon-Brookes said the fundraisin­g brought Australia “one step closer to realising our renewables exporting potential”, while developing a blueprint for other projects. “We can power the world with clean energy and Sun Cable is harnessing that at scale.”

“Sun Cable’s vision will transform Australia’s capability to become a world-leading generator and exporter of renewable electricit­y and enable decarbonis­ation. I’m proud to be a cornerston­e investor in Sun Cable, its team and its vision,” Forrest said.

Squadron Energy and Forrest’s Fortescue Future Industries were approached for comment.

The latter had a big week, landing Guy Debelle, the current deputy governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia to be its chief financial officer.

Debelle, who had been considered to be a frontrunne­r to replace current central bank governor Philip Lowe, will help steer the company’s plans to produce 15m tonnes of hydrogen produced by renewable energy a year by 2030 for global markets.

“Climate change has a broad-ranging impact on Australia, both in terms of geography and in terms of Australian businesses and households,” Debelle said in a statement after his surprise exit from the RBA.

“Australia has been an energy exporter for many decades,” he said. “Australia is also endowed with resources that have the potential for us to continue to be an exporter of energy – but renewable rather than emissionsi­ntensive fossil fuels.”

Debelle’s now former boss, RBA governor Lowe, told a banking conference on Friday investors wanted a plan on how Australia would transition to a less carbon-intensive economy.

“They want to know what the opportunit­ies Australia has and they want to talk about the risks that we have as well,” Lowe said, noting Debelle had resigned “to participat­e in those opportunit­ies”.

Institutio­ns such as the RBA and the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority were working on a framework to help markets measure, manage and price the risks as Australia shifted out of fossil fuels, he said. These included assessing climate vulnerabil­ity.

“We need to provide the people who want to make capital decisions with informatio­n, and it needs to be quality informatio­n,” Lowe said. “Australia [can] seize the fantastic opportunit­ies we have in this area. That’s a huge challenge for the future.”

 ?? Photograph: Roslan Rahman/AFP/Getty Images ?? A solar power farm off Singapore's coast. Sun Cable’s solar farm project in northern Australia aims to power Darwin, Indonesia and Singapore.
Photograph: Roslan Rahman/AFP/Getty Images A solar power farm off Singapore's coast. Sun Cable’s solar farm project in northern Australia aims to power Darwin, Indonesia and Singapore.

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