Renewables

Federal government tips $43m into decarbonising “hard to abate” sectors

Published by

The federal government has set aside $43 million to help fund the emissions reduction task of some of Australia’s largest industrial energy consumers in some of its hardest to abate sectors, including producers of steel, aluminium, bauxite and chemicals.

Through the Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA), $43 million will be made available via two streams of grant funding to support feasibility studies and engineering studies around the integration of renewables and energy efficiency technologies.

The grants program will target the agriculture, mining, manufacturing, gas supply, water supply, waste services and data centre sectors, which are the largest users of energy in Australia, in particular to produce heat for industrial and other processes.

Grants will be available for between $100,000 and $500,000 for feasibility studies or $250,000 and $5 million for engineering studies, ARENA says.

The Agency says undertook informal consultation with a number of industry associations to design the program approach.

“As Australian industries look to decarbonise, we must now find smart, replicable solutions to help cut energy costs and reduce emissions in hard to abate sectors,” said ARENA CEO Darren Miller on Thursday.

“The Industrial Energy Transformation Studies Program will identify credible and innovative solutions to the challenge of reducing emissions in industry,” Miller said.

“Through this program, ARENA is looking to support solutions that can provide blueprints for business across energy intensive industrial sectors.”

Federal energy minister Chris Bowen says the program aims to help identify opportunities to reduce energy costs in industries and cut emissions in line with the Albanese government’s climate targets.

“The ARENA grants will help industrial emitters to find innovative ways to cut their energy demand, adopt renewable energy, save on their energy bills, and help Australia meet its emissions reduction targets,” Bowen said.

Sophie Vorrath

Sophie is editor of Renew Economy and editor of its sister site, One Step Off The Grid . She is the co-host of the Solar Insiders Podcast. Sophie has been writing about clean energy for more than a decade.

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

A tale of two budgets: A win for cheaper, cleaner energy in one state, more “coal-keeper” in the other

Two state budgets, two starkly different attitudes to the role of renewables in securing enduring…

24 June 2026

Energy storage neck and neck with nuclear after record 13.5 GW of big batteries added in Europe

Europe added a record 13.5 gigawatts and 26.4 gigawatt-hours of battery storage in 2025, helping…

24 June 2026

“Logjam of loads:” Network says data centre rush will push some parts of grid to capacity by 2033

The operator of Australia's biggest transmission network says a highly coveted part of its grid…

24 June 2026

Bowen summons watchdogs to examine why electricity bills are rising, despite falling power prices

Federal energy minister puts retailers on notice for failing to pass on electricity price reductions…

24 June 2026

Bowen says struggling wind projects can rebid, but won’t be able to change their contract

Bowen rules out renegotiating wind contracts under his flagship CIS, but says struggling projects are…

24 June 2026

Fifteen big battery projects named winners of massive CIS storage tender, nearly half of them in Queensland

Fifteen big battery projects, almost all with four hours of storage and nearly half of…

24 June 2026