News

Landholder group calls for senate probe into renewable project impacts

Beef Central, 18/05/2023

Landholder representative group Property Rights Australia (PRA) is calling for a Federal Senate inquiry regarding the impacts on rural and regional Australia from renewable energy developments and associated transmission projects.

“Renewable energy developments are having significant negative impacts on rural and regional communities and environments across Australia,” Interim Chair of Property Rights Australia (PRA) Jim Willmott said.

In a statement calling for a senate inquiry, PRA has raised the following concerns:

• Deficiencies within current governance arrangements regulating the development and planning of renewable energy developments;

• Limited legislative and approval mechanisms compared to the regulatory burden placed on other industries like agriculture, mining, and commercial tourism ventures;

RELATED: We’re facing fight of our lives, say graziers impacted by renewable energy projects 

• Lack of governance arrangements are producing “perverse social, economic, and environmental impacts throughout rural and regional communities unlucky enough to be within renewable energy zones”;

• Outside of each defined project area there are no triple bottom line assessment for renewable energy developments and their transmission connections across each region.

• Foreign renewable energy companies have “an open ticket from Government” to develop  industrial wind and solar complexes with little or no regard to community and environmental values.

“There are many concerns and issues that need scrutiny through the mechanisms provided by a Federal Senate inquiry,” Mr Willmott said.

“Ultimately, greater oversight is needed with a view to tightening the regulatory and planning approvals for renewable energy developments and associated transmission connection infrastructure.”

“Rural Australians are being asked to wear the impacts of renewable energy project developments but who is really benefiting financially because it’s not a win for the environment or regional communities that have to host these projects.

“The Government’s message of more jobs and community facilities is nothing more than a marketing strategy designed to convince urban populations of the benefits of renewable energy projects whilst delivering the opposite.”

Source: Property Rights Australia

Leave a Reply to David Crighton Cancel Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Your comment will not appear until it has been moderated.
Contributions that contravene our Comments Policy will not be published.

Comments

  1. Amber Pedersen, 22/05/2023

    Thank you PRA for organising this.

    The draft NSW wind energy guidelines 2011 required an upfront 2km setback from turbines to houses. Since then turbines have tripled in height and tripled in megawatt power., but there are now no setback requirements in the current NSW wind energy guidelines.
    This places IMMENSE stress & anxiety on surrounding landowners & communities that are forced to fight foreign-owned multinationals for YEARS., to remove e.g. in the case of Ark Energy’s Burrendong Wind Farm proposal, 250m high, 6.3MW turbines that are proposed on top of the Worlds End Ridgeline constantly spinning with red flashing lights & noise valley echo, which will tower over 1/2km into the air above houses with some setback only 1km!
    There must be a minimum 10km setback from dwellings to turbines upfront. Where this can’t be achieved wind companies can attempt to offer buy out surrounding landowners.
    Upfront setback requirements will dramatically reduce years of stress and anxiety forced upon rural communities.

  2. David Crighton, 20/05/2023

    It all needs to have the same regulations across the board no matter what the development. Coal mines, power stations, housing or green energy be fair or step down.

Get Beef Central's news headlines emailed to you -
FREE!