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Australia approves US$13.5 billion solar project to power Singapore via undersea cable

  • Sun Cable, the company behind the initiative, said electricity supply is expected to begin in the early 2030s

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A solar farm in Australia. Photo: Shutterstock
Australia said on Wednesday it had given the go-ahead for a A$20 billion (US$13.5 billion) solar project that plans to ship energy from a giant solar farm in the country’s north to Singapore through a 4,300km (2,672 miles) undersea cable.
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Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek said Sun Cable’s flagship Australia-Asia power link project would help meet growing demand for renewable energy at home and abroad.

A final investment decision is expected in 2027 with electricity supply to begin in the early 2030s, according to Sun Cable.

The approval comes with strict conditions to protect nature and the project must avoid the habitat of greater bilby, which are small rabbit-like marsupials with long floppy ears, Plibersek said.

Over two stages of development, the project aims to deliver up to 6 gigawatts of green electricity to large-scale industrial customers in Darwin, the capital city of Australia’s Northern Territory, and in Singapore.

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The approval comes as the centre-left government ramps up renewable energy projects even as the opposition coalition proposes building nuclear plants to replace coal-fired power by 2050, in a country where nuclear power is currently banned.

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