Wind

Offshore wind turbines near impossible to see in visualisations for Gippsland zone

Published by

With the naked eye, it will be nigh impossible to see offshore wind turbines from Gippsland beaches, according to updated visualisations issued by the Victoria state government.

The images purport to show what the view could look like from Golden beach and Woodside beach in Gippsland, which are the closest land locations to the nearest declared wind area. 

The visualisations – for turbines located 10km, 30km and 60km offshore – illustrate what a person might be able to see once turbines are erected in the late 2020s and early 2030s on a sunny day. 

The latest images suggest the turbines will be even less visible to the naked eye than in previous visualisations, and impossible at distances of 30km and 60km.

The simulated view of what the nearest Gippsland offshore wind turbines will look like from Mt Oberon in Wilson’s Prom national park. Image: Victoria DEECA

Ten feasibility licences were awarded for the Gippsland declared offshore wind zone, with a vanguard of six in May last year followed by another four several months later.

Both developers and government have long recognised how important picturing what these will look like from the land is for winning over locals living in Gippsland.

The simulated view of what the nearest Gippsland offshore wind turbines will look like from Mt Oberon in Wilson’s Prom national park. Image: Victoria DEECA

In 2022,  BlueFloat Energy and Energy Estate put together a 3D simulation of their 1.28 gigawatt (GW) Gippsland Offshore wind farm as it was then proposed would look like from 10 to 30 kilometres off the Victorian coast.

And last year a company called Spatial Media began doing the same, allowing people to visualise how renewable energy projects generally would fit into their area.

Last week the Victorian energy department updated its page saying the images were new, but later said the images were in fact from March.

Rachel Williamson is a science and business journalist, who focuses on climate change-related health and environmental issues.

Rachel Williamson

Rachel Williamson is a science and business journalist, who focuses on climate change-related health and environmental issues.

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

CIS-winning wind farm finally starts construction, more than a decade after first unveiling

One of the first wind projects to win a CIS deal has finally begun construction,…

8 July 2026

Electric trucks, mines and farms, low carbon fuels key to break Australia’s foreign fuel dependence

Superpower Institute releases findings from study examining ways to improve Australia's fuel security in the…

8 July 2026

“They are losing patience:” Just one in ten investors believe Australia will meet renewables target

Investors buoyed by re-election of a Labor government last year are now downbeat, citing transmission,…

8 July 2026

CIS bakes in First Nations equity, revenue sharing deal for next renewables and storage tenders

Capacity in upcoming renewable and storage tenders under the CIS to be reserved for projects…

7 July 2026

Renewables remain cheapest new power option, and avoided $US480bn in fossil fuel costs in 2025

Renewables described as not only the cheapest new power source around the world, but also…

7 July 2026

Network owner says it sought to wind up leading renewable retailer due to outstanding debts

Network owner says it pursued winding up of Zen Energy due to outstanding debts, as…

7 July 2026