RenewEconomy can reveal that Neoen plans to install one
10 MW plant, one 15 MW plant and
three 30 MW plants in and around the cities and towns of Dubbo, Narromine,
Griffith, Parkes and Gilgandra.
According
to Neoen Managing Director Franck Woitiez, the solar plants – the
project is called the Dubbo Solar Hub – are attractive because they will be
close to consumption centers, are in areas with good solar irradiance, and are
unlikely to have any local opposition as the projects are ideally located and
would benefit to the local community.
Woitiez
says the planning approvals for the projects are well advanced, and connection
studies are also on-going.
"We
leveraged our experience from overseas and came to the conclusion that solar between 5 MW-30 MW is
easy to develop, deploy, operate and integrate into the grid," he says.
"Being
close to consumption also makes sense in a way that you don’t increase
transmission costs and you minimise losses. This shall enhance those projects in
the best economical way."
The
Neoen solar plants would make
solar the largest local source of generation in western New South Wales (NSW),
which already has the some of the highest penetration rates of rooftop solar (Dubbo was
once proclaimed the solar capital of Australia), and with the large-scale solar
plants being built by First Solar at Nyngan (102 MW) and Broken Hill (53
MW).
On
top of that, an alliance of western NSW councils has called for A$200 million of
funding to build a range of small to medium-sized solar plants, that would
include solar thermal as well as solar
PV. In addition, Vast Solar has begun
construction of a 6 MWth (1.1 MWe)
concentrated solar thermal power station with three hours storage – the first
stand alone plant of its type to be built in Australia- near Forbes, also in
western NSW.
Woitiez
says the western NSW solar projects are, however, dependent on the government
committing to the current 41,000 GWh renewable energy target, as are its other
renewable energy investments in Australia.
Neoen
recently teamed with Megawatt Capital to buy the undeveloped 270 MW Hornsdale wind
project in South Australia, and is believed to have tendered a 100 MW first
stage into the Australian Capital Territory (ACT) government's wind auction.
Neoen
and Megawatt Capital are also looking to complete the purchase or more renewable
energy projects from Investec, including two solar projects in Western
Australia.
Neoen
is also using Australia as a base for Asian investment, particularly for the
Philippines, where there is a growing appetite for solar.
Neoen
has also just landed a contract to build a 74 MW solar project in El Salvador
for a price of US$102/MWh – and it believes that this price is something that is
achievable in Australia, if the large-scale solar industry takes off and the
cost of finance comes down.
However,
he said it would require more appetite for solar from utilities in peaking
periods – something that is already happening in the U.S. – and a willingness to
keep a "decent" RET from the government. "That is the only way forward," he
said.
Other
international solar companies have made similar warnings. Recurrent Energy has
already packed its bags, despite having a A$2 billion pipeline in Australia,
First Solar has warned it will take its investments elsewhere, and others –
including Australia’s Infigen Energy and Pacific Hydro – have said the same.
Woitiez
said Neoen is committed to spending at least A$250 million in the next coming
years in Australia, provided that the policy doesn’t create any sovereign risk
threats.
Source: RenewEconomy. Reproduced with
permission.
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