GE
invests in $348 million windfarm after Australian
subsidy deadlock ends
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[June 26, 2015]
By Byron Kaye
SYDNEY (Reuters) - General Electric Co said
it will help fund a $348 million Australian windfarm, the country's
third largest, after political leaders ended a deadlock over state
subsidies that had stalled the $13 billion industry for over a year.
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GE, Swiss private equity firm Partners Group Holding AG <PGHN.S>,
Canadian pension fund OPTrust and UK-based Renewable Energy Systems
Ltd said they will fund the 240-megawatt Ararat windfarm, three days
after the government passed a law securing future subsidies for
renewable energy.
Windfarms are Australia's No. 2 renewable energy source, behind
hydropower but ahead of solar, providing a quarter of the country's
clean energy and 4 percent of its total energy demand. But
investment in the sector froze after the conservative government
said last year it wanted to cut the country's Renewable Energy
Target (RET).
The Ararat windfarm, which will power 123,000 homes, was among
dozens of projects shelved, and the commitment to revive it signals
the industry is kicking back to life now the level of state support
has been agreed. Under Australian law, the RET must be agreed by
both the coalition government and the Labor opposition.
"With certainty comes investment," said GE's president and CEO for
Australia, New Zealand and Papua New Guinea, Geoff Culbert.
"That's our experience overseas and that's what we'll see here in
Australia now that the RET is fully resolved. This decision has
immediately unlocked half a billion dollars of direct foreign
investment into Australia," Culbert added.
Asked about comments by Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott, who
this month described windfarms as "visually awful" and a potential
health hazard, Culbert noted that Australia's health guidelines
body, the National Health and Medical Research Council, had
concluded there was no evidence that wind farms cause adverse health
effects.
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"The RET represents a bipartisan solution, and we applaud the
Coalition and ALP (Australian Labor Party) for achieving that," he
said in an emailed statement. "It's important that the views of all
groups are heard, and that any concerns are addressed with fact and
science."
The government plans to appoint a windfarm commissioner to process
complaints about the industry.
(Reporting by Byron Kaye; Editing by Richard Pullin)
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