Golden Plains WF Approved

State to host biggest wind farm in southern hemisphere as turbines win final approval

28th November, 2021

By Michael Fowler, The Age.

Construction on the biggest wind farm in the southern hemisphere will start in Victoria next year after the state’s Planning Minister gave the final tick of approval to the $2 billion facility.

It will have almost twice as many turbines and be roughly double the megawatt capacity of the wind farm at Coopers Gap in Queensland, which is presently the biggest in Australia.

It comes after years of legal challenges by local farmers and wrangling over the size of the wind farm, where 230-metre turbines – almost as tall as Melbourne’s Rialto Towers – will produce enough power for more than 765,000 homes per year, according to the project’s operators.

The site at Rokewood, 130 kilometres west of Melbourne, will cover 167 square kilometres.

Planning Minister Richard Wynne last week quietly approved WestWind Energy’s final proposal for the Golden Plains Wind Farm. The operator says it will start building in the middle of next year.

Under the plan, WestWind will give annual payments to neighbours, starting at $1000 per turbine to those who live within two kilometres of them. “We appreciate that all major infrastructure projects have some impacts to the communities in which they are constructed,” a spokeswoman said. “We are grateful to the local community who have worked with us over the past five years while the Golden Plains Wind Farm has been in development, irrespective of their personal opinion of the project.”

Wind turbines in the Oiz Eolic Park in Spain. Victoria has set a target of halving emissions from 2005 levels by the end of 2030.
Wind turbines in the Oiz Eolic Park in Spain. Victoria has set a target of halving emissions from 2005 levels by the end of 2030.CREDIT:ISTOCK

Farmer Hamish Cumming has led three court challenges against WestWind over the project since 2019, but his campaign was rejected in the Court of Appeal last November.

WestWind was initially given a permit for 228 turbines, although Mr Wynne said in an environmental assessment soon after that it should be reduced to 181 to protect the habitat of brolgas, a native bird.

Yet the final planning scheme was approved with a provision for 215 turbines in a layout that WestWind said was still being finalised.

Lawyer Dominica Tannock, who represented Mr Cumming during his legal cases, lodged an official request with Mr Wynne at the start of the year asking him to refer WestWind’s updated proposal to a planning panel because, she said, it had been reconfigured from the initial plan.

Mr Wynne declined to do so. Ms Tannock said she was considering challenging this.

“This is a massive piece of infrastructure being built in Victoria and the public hasn’t seen the final plans,” she said.

“What we do know is there will be 215 turbines squeezed into a space where the minister previously told them to accommodate 181.”

In a statement, the Planning Minister said it was not necessary to send the updated proposal to a planning panel because it did not increase the total number of turbines or their height compared with the original permit granted in 2018.

Planning Minister Richard Wynne signed off on the final proposal last week.
Planning Minister Richard Wynne signed off on the final proposal last week.CREDIT:SIMON SCHLUTER

“Like all applications to amend a planning permit, the application to amend the Golden Plains Wind Farm was considered on its merits and in line with relevant planning policy and legislation,” he said.

The Andrews government has set a target of halving emissions from 2005 levels by the end of 2030, resulting in significant investment in renewable energy.

Last week the Premier pledged $40 million towards proposals for three offshore wind farms near the Gippsland coast. The largest project, Star of the South, would power about 1.8 million homes if it comes to fruition.

Golden Plains Shire welcomed the decision on the wind farm at Rokewood, which mayor Gavin Gamble said would create 768 jobs in a town with a population of 300.

One thought on “Golden Plains WF Approved

  1. I have accumulated the “aneroid” graphs of aggregate MW measurements, for every windfarm they list, for every month since January 2020. One can quite clearly see that no Earthly or even Aquatic energy storage can compensate for the vagaries of the wind.
    If you want to cross an ocean, and there is enough wind to propel your vessel in the number of days you have to spend, it doesn’t matter whether it comes in the morning, afternoon, or at night.
    But if there’s no wind on the “turbines” when everybody wants to be cooking, it’s no help that there was plenty in the middle of the day!

    Like

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