Contract signed for new two-turbine wind farm in Victoria

Construction of a small, two-turbine wind farm near Ararat western Victoria is due to begin soon after Future Energy secured equity and debt financing for the 6.9MW project.

The Maroona wind farm will feature just two Vestas V126 wind turbines, located on two separate properties, generating the equivalent power needs of 4,000 households.

chepstowe wind

Maroona will be the sixth Future Energy wind farm development to be permitted in Victoria, and the second that Future Energy has developed, financed, and constructed itself.

It obtained equity funding from Germany-based ProVentum International, and from newly established Sydney-based renewable energy investment group Renew Power Group.

Future Energy will retain a small stake via a subsidiary company, debt funding is being supplied by the Commonwealth Bank and Alinta has signed a long-term power purchase agreement for the power and the renewable energy certificates.

The Victorian-based Future Energy was established in 2005 to develop, construct and operate smaller scale wind and solar projects throughout Australia

Its first involvement was with the community-owned Hepburn wind project and its first development of its own was the 6MW Chepstowe project, pictured above, also in Victoria. Like Chepstow, Maroona was to be a three-turbine wind farm but the increased size and output of new turbines meant two turbines were enough.

Future Energy’s David Shapero says more projects are getting closer to financial close, thanks to the fact that energy retailers are finally coming on board with projects.

“There are still only a few private PPAs,” he told RenewEconomy, “and that’s disappointing.” But there was also a lot of international investment interest in Australia.

He said the complete mismatch between market prices (or wholesale electricity and renewable energy certificate prices) , with PPAs being struck at around half that price.

Still, investors are locking in long-term returns and banks are less willing to lend on market price, known in the industry as “going merchant.”

Shapero said Future Energy was looking to bring more projects coming into construction. It has several more wind farm projects in Victoria, and a proposed 10MW solar project near Ouyen, south of Mildura. All will depend on PPAs.

Renew Power Group is a renewable energy investment business that focuses on medium to large-scale wind and solar development opportunities and is currently building a portfolio of projects.

ProVentum International is the operating company of Reiner Zoller, a pioneer developer, investor, owner and operator of wind projects in Germany, Thailand and Australia for more than 20 years.

Zoller was responsible for some of the earliest wind farm developments in Germany, and was the developer of Victoria’s Mount Gellibrand wind farm which is currently under construction near Colac.

 

 

Comments

4 responses to “Contract signed for new two-turbine wind farm in Victoria”

  1. George Darroch Avatar
    George Darroch

    It’s interesting and heartening that a small operation like this can work as a commercial proposition.

    Does Renew Power Group have any relationship with RenewEconomy? (I’m presuming not, but asking for the sake of completeness).

    1. Sunbuntu Ltd Avatar
      Sunbuntu Ltd

      No. It is owned by Andrew King, Robert Purves and a few others.

  2. Peter F Avatar
    Peter F

    These small plants near towns might cost a little more per MW to build but they can save a lot of money in transmission and distribution and improve grid resilience. These two turbines plus solar on half the roofs will supply all the electrical energy for a district of 6,000 people.
    They can also be connected to 22kV lines so there are many more potential sites with lower transmission upgrade requirements
    They are small enough to allow significant local ownership through councils, co-ops or community power companies
    Three 12-15 turbine wind farms and similar solar penetration could power the city of Bendigo

  3. Mic Galvin Avatar
    Mic Galvin

    An example of poor siting. Please do not support this mega 274km2 wind farm that relies on fossil fuels for base load anyway and has a life of 20 years. It interferes with Whale watching at Wilsons Promontory and IMPORTANT BIRD AREAS identified by Birdlife International including coast reserves and 19 Islands that link to Tasmania IMPORTANT BIRD AREAS. Australia’s biggest wind farm Macarthar estimated 1500 bird carcasses over a year however scavengers come and they only checked once a month over twelve months, that is about 10 birds per turbine per year, some up to 80 birds per turbine per year. The offshore wind farms are more dangerous. The proposed wind farm for the Central Highlands of Tasmania contains 206 counted bird species and is being used as leverage for a 2nd bass link which means more cloud seeding for hydro power and more loggging native forests for green power MANDATORY Renewable energy targets. Note SA has highest unemployment by State and highest priced energy in Australia and one of the most expensive in the world.

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