Queensland's biggest wind farm powers ahead

Published Thursday, 02 March, 2017 at 12:19 PM

JOINT STATEMENT

Minister for State Development and Minister for Natural Resources and Mines
The Honourable Dr Anthony Lynham

Minister for Main Roads, Road Safety and Ports and Minister for Energy, Biofuels and Water Supply
The Honourable Mark Bailey

More jobs and clean energy loom in regional Queensland as a $500 million wind farm proposal progresses between Kingaroy and Dalby.

Minister for State Development Dr Anthony Lynham said the state’s independent Coordinator-General had today approved AGL Energy Limited’s environmental impact statement for its Coopers Gap wind farm.

The wind farm is forecast to create 350 construction jobs and 20 permanent jobs when it is operational in 2020, supplying power through Powerlink’s existing transmission line to the network.

“This is a win for jobs and businesses in the local area, and for the environment generally,” Dr Lynham said.

“AGL has advised it will employ local people and use local contractors from across the Wide Bay Burnett and Darling Downs wherever possible.

“This project will contribute up to $4 million each year to the local economy.”    

Minister for Energy Mark Bailey said Queensland’s biggest wind farm could generate up to 460MW of electricity and potentially power more than 240,000 households.

“This project is a clear example of the Palaszczuk Government’s commitment to generating regional jobs, while acting on climate change and reducing carbon emissions,” he said.

“As a renewable energy project, it is estimated that around 1 million tonnes per year of greenhouse gas emissions would be avoided through supply of the wind farm’s green power into the grid – the equivalent of taking about 320,000 petrol-driven cars off the road each year.”

“The Palaszczuk Government has already kick-started the renewable energy boom in Queensland with more than 1GW of privately funded renewable energy projects currently in the works delivering more than $2 billion of new investment to Queensland and more than 1900 direct jobs, mostly in our regions – with more to come.

“We established a renewable energy expert panel to advise on credible pathways to a 50 percent renewable energy target by 2030, and their advice is currently being considered.

“We’re committed to transitioning to a clean energy future responsibly which will see Queensland’s energy system powered by a mix of renewables, gas and traditional baseload generation.”

The Coordinator-General has placed conditions on his approval, including on noise compliance and testing, shadow flicker compliance and offsets for flora and fauna disturbance.

The Coordinator-General’s report is available at www.dsd.qld.gov.au

Media contact – Dr Lynham: Jan Martin 0439 341 314

Media contact – Minister Bailey: Zoe Russell 0428 079 640

Eds: Download a map and images here.