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Developer warns wind energy capacity may not be ready by WA coal deadline

Developer warns wind energy capacity may not be ready by WA coal deadline

A wind developer undergoing what it says is a "marathon" approval process says it may not be operational by the time Western Australia's coal-fired power stations are switched off.
The WA government has set a 2030 deadline for the wind-down of coal-fired power generation, and has backed onshore wind as a key part of the state's new electricity mix.
Projects planned for southern WA include wind farms around West Arthur, Narrogin, Williams, Boddington and Scott River.
However, many are yet to begin construction and a developer says the 2030 deadline may need to be extended to keep the lights on.
In Boddington, about 130 kilometres south of Perth, the companies behind the Marradong Wind Farm are yet to make a final investment decision.
The 45-turbine, 300-megawatt project is a collaboration between developers Wind with Purpose and Quenda Wind Power.
The latter is a subsidiary of Sumitomo Corporation, which partially owns the struggling Bluewaters Power Station in Collie.
Quenda business development head Daniel Kurz said meeting the state government's 2030 "line in the sand" would be challenging.
Wind with Purpose chief executive Chris Kearney said while the project was currently on track to be operational by 2029, there was not much wiggle room.
"If we don't hit our targets for getting this project online, and likewise if Western Power don't have the infrastructure to connect these projects, then the reality is coal-fired power plants may have to stay online a few years longer than planned," he said.
The Marradong Wind Farm would use existing power infrastructure in the area.
But 100km down the road, RES Australia's wind farm — more than twice the size of the Marradong project with 110 turbines — would rely on transmission infrastructure being upgraded.
Once operational, the project in Dardadine, 197km south-east of Perth, would generate enough electricity to power up to 450,000 homes.
It is also yet to progress beyond the consultation and assessment stage.
Development director Greg Wilkinson said construction should start by 2028, with a view to being fully operational by the end of 2031.
But he said if the project went ahead and the power infrastructure was ready, he was willing to bring it forward.
"We're working with Western Power and Powering WA to ensure that we can get this project up and powering WA homes as soon as we can," Mr Wilkinson said.
The Clean Energy Council's Chris O'Keefe said a lack of transmission lines was a sticking point for the industry.
"The WA government needs to build 250 kilometres of new transmission lines," he said.
"[Otherwise] we might have a situation where we're generating two or three gigawatts of onshore wind, yet there's not enough transmission to get it to the places where it needs to get to."
The Cook government's latest budget included $584.3 million to be spent on network upgrades and the expansion of the Clean Energy Link.
It has also promised to set up transmission manufacturing hubs in Perth and the South West.
The WA government said it was not relying on a controversial, federally backed offshore wind project to be ready by 2030.
But Energy Minister Amber-Jade Sanderson said onshore wind would be "critical" heading into 2030.
"We do support a sensible mix of renewable energy and big battery storage … [and] we will still continue to need gas as a firming fuel as we exit coal," she said.
Ms Sanderson said she would work with proponents on what was needed.
However, Mr O'Keefe said he was worried work was not happening quickly enough.
"They need to crack on with that if that 2030 target is to be met."
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Perth mum reveals how her maternity leave sparked her wealth transformation
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Perth mum reveals how her maternity leave sparked her wealth transformation

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China's carbon emissions may have peaked thanks to renewables push

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Despite the rapid installation of renewable energy plants across the country, China is still building new coal-fired power plants. Beijing approved on average two coal-powered projects a week in 2022 and 2023, after power shortages in 2021. Belinda Schäpe said a backlog of these projects was now coming online, but they were using less coal. "There's been a significant drop in coal imports … in June, there was a 25 per cent year-on-year drop in coal imports," she said. "In June, China's power demand growth was actually 70 per cent higher than last year this time around, but solar and wind power generation met 89 per cent of that power demand growth. "That's what we've been seeing over the last six months, really, where renewables, or solar and wind in particular, accounted for 24 per cent of total electricity generation. Chinese President Xi Jinping has pledged to continue phasing down the country's coal consumption in the next five years, between 2026 and 2030. 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Regional communities look for banking solutions as major banks leave town
Regional communities look for banking solutions as major banks leave town

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The credit union was formed on the island of Milingimbi after remote communities in the Top End had no access to banking facilities. "Big banks have got shareholders and they've got to answer to them," he said. "It's costly to operate in remote communities. "It's very difficult, particularly up here in the Northern Territory, where a number of these communities are cut off in the wet season and access to them is limited quite often to fly-in." Mr Lyons said communities suffered when banks pulled out, and getting cash into those areas could become difficult for local businesses and groups. "It sounds like a minor thing, but it is actually a major thing, along with the ability to actually go and talk to someone." Mr Lyons said services, such as opening or cancelling accounts or handing deceased estates, could only happen in branches, and closing locations could impact local jobs. He said the community banking model worked, but also needed support. "We're the smallest bank in the country, but we're regulated in exactly the same way as a Commonwealth Bank or a National Australia Bank," he said. "That regulation and compliance with that regulation come at a cost, and it isn't proportional." Mr Lyons said smaller banks like TCU had the same regulatory requirements and the same cost impost without the same revenue flows and profit. In February this year, Treasurer Jim Chalmers announced a moratorium on regional banking closures from the big four banks until July 2027. Banks were also asked to increase their "commitment to and investment in regional banking", with Bank@Post, that is banking at a post office, being one of the preferred options. "Communities, despite their remoteness or the fact that they are regional, shouldn't be deprived of that." One solution that border communities in Victoria and New South Wales have adopted is the partnership between smaller banks and councils. 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The union said it was continuing to pressure the federal government on the issue of regional banking. The union's assistant national secretary, Nicole McPherson, said it had been 14 months since a Senate inquiry handed down a report calling for banking to be regulated as an essential service. "It is critical that the federal government step in and protect bank workers and customers, given that the banks have proven themselves to be incapable of doing anything other than putting profits and shareholders first," she said. The Australian Banking Association declined to comment.

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