Green Energy

Melbourne Becomes First Australian City To Power Entire Council Infrastructure with Renewables

The City of Melbourne has announced that its entire council is now powered by 100 percent Renewable Energy. In doing so, the city has now become the first in Australia to have all its council infrastructure powered by green energy.

Arron Wood, Deputy Lord Mayor, City of Melbourne

City of Melbourne Deputy Lord Mayor Arron Wood said Pacific Hydro has installed 25 of the 39 turbines required at the Crowlands Windfarm near Ararat in Western Victoria, and energy has begun flowing into the power grid.

“Making the move to 100 percent renewable energy is the ultimate New Year’s resolution. Every light on our streets, every treadmill in our gyms and every barbecue in our parks is now powered by renewable energy,” he said.

“We are immensely proud to be the first Australian capital city council powered by 100 percent renewable energy. We were also the first group in this country to implement a renewable energy power purchasing agreement. We have led the nation in responding to climate change, securing a sustainable energy supply for the future and have shown a great example of how a major city with a $92 billion economy can influence positive outcomes in our regional towns,” he added.

The Yarra, Port Phillip, and Moreland councils, as well as Australia Post, Bank Australia, the National Australia Bank, Melbourne University, Federation Square, Melbourne Convention, and Exhibition Centre and Zoos Victoria are part of the buying group and have all initiated their new energy contracts on the same day.

The group agreed to purchase 88GWh of electricity per year, about half of the energy that will be produced by the 80MW Crowlands Windfarm.

Under the agreement, 40% of the power will be purchased at a fixed price while 60% will be a market-based price that is renegotiated every two years.

The Project was funded, in part, by efficiency measures including a $16m upgrade of the city’s 12,000 street lamps to LED lights, which is expected to shave $1m a year off the council’s power bills once the changeover is completed in July.

[related_post]

Melbourne is the coastal capital of the southeastern Australian state of Victoria. There are more than 40 large-scale wind and solar projects either under construction or with planning approval in Victoria, as well as more than 26 that are already producing electricity. With its 65O MW Reverse auction target and recent approval of $1.5 Billion, 17000-hectare Windfarm at Golden Plains, Victoria is on track to exceed its renewable energy targets of generating 25% of the state’s electricity needs from renewable sources by 2020 and 40% by 2025.

I am Renew

Recent Posts

Honeywell to power Petrobras SAF project in Brazil

American company Honeywell has announced that Brazilian multinational energy conglomerate Petrobras has selected its Ethanol-to-Jet…

2 days ago

TERI revives biomass gasifier for clean & affordable community cooking

Amid rising LPG prices and periodic supply disruptions affecting clean cooking access, The Energy and…

2 days ago

Ankur Scientific marks 40 years with strong growth momentum and aggressive expansion plans

Ankur Scientific, a global leader in bioenergy and waste-to-energy solutions, has marked its 40th year…

2 days ago

European Commission gives €3.7 billion to Czech Republic for biogas production

The European Commission has approved a €3.7 billion Czech scheme to support the construction of…

2 days ago

DHL, IAG Cargo sign major Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF) deal

The DHL Group has announced a major expansion of its sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) collaboration…

2 days ago

Juno Joule to develop Rs 700 crore CBG project in Telangana

Hyderabad headquartered Juno Joule Bio Fuels Private Limited has initiated construction of its flagship Compressed…

4 days ago