Australia's biggest solar project is on
track to start construction by April after lining up major power
retailer EnergyAustralia as a customer and an infrastructure fund as a
partner, its developer, ESCO Pacific, said on Monday.The
project is the latest in a string of solar farms due to be built over
the next few years to help meet the Australian government's target to
generate 23.5 percent of the nation's electricity from renewable energy
by 2020.
Privately-owned
ESCO Pacific said it aims to complete the 142 megawatt Ross River solar
farm on a former mango plantation in tropical Queensland state in early
2018 at a cost of around A$225 million ($172 million).
EnergyAustralia
has agreed to buy 80 percent of Ross River's output for 13 years, as
part of a A$1.5 billion program to source around 500 MW of electricity
from wind and solar, which would help offset carbon emissions from its
coal-fired plants.
Owned by Hong Kong's CLP Holdings Ltd, EnergyAustralia is Australia's second-biggest carbon emitter.
Infrastructure
investor Palisade Partners has agreed to take a 50 percent stake in the
Ross River solar farm, adding to investments it has in wind farms.
source: http://www.reuters.com
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