Wind

Progress as 800MW Clarke Creek wind farm nears construction in Queensland

Published by

Construction looks set to begin on Lacour Energy’s 800MW Clarke Creek wind farm in central Queensland anytime soon, after the first community consultative committee meeting for the project was held last week.

Goldwind Australia, which is delivering the massive $1 billion project for Lacour, said the inaugural meeting marked the first of what would now be quarterly community consultations, focusing on the project’s progress and the development and delivery of the associated community fund.

Goldwind said the project team delivered an update on the wind farm’s construction program, which had been due to commence in 2019. The project is expected to create 350 jobs once it is in full swing.

Goldwind community engagement manager Clare Powell said the meetings would keep the community informed about the project, seek local views and respond to matters raised by the community.

“The committee will have an advisory and consultative role within the project’s delivery, particularly for the development and delivery of the community fund for the project. The $200,000 annual community fund will commence once the project starts construction,” Powell said.

The 195 turbine project won state approval in June 2018, and then federal approval later that year. It also has approval for the addition of 400MW of large-scale solar and a grid-scale battery system, which would boost costs to $1.5 billion.

Director of Lacour Energy, Mark Rayner, said the plan was for the Clarke Creek Integrated Wind, Solar and Battery Power Station to be located at one of the strongest locations of the Queensland power system – with no grid extension required.

“Located on the backbone of the Powerlink 275 kV transmission network approximately 150km northwest of Rockhampton, the Clarke Creek Integrated Wind, Solar and Battery Project will have a construction cost totalling over $1.5 billion,” Goldwind said on Monday.

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

SwitchedOn podcast: How I electrified – the unexpected payoffs from ditching gas at home

A Melbourne family’s shift off gas reveals that electrification isn’t just about cutting emissions —…

4 May 2026

“The right person:” SEC names new leader to replace long-serving CEO John Grimes

The Smart Energy Council has completed the search to replace its CEO of nearly two…

4 May 2026

Australia’s coal mines haven’t cut methane emissions, but hidden them with offsets and accounting tricks

Methane emissions at Australia's coal mines are falling, but because of lower production, offsets and…

4 May 2026

FranklinWH Introduces Enhanced 15 kWh aPower in Australia and New Zealand

FranklinWH announced the launch of its enhanced 15 kWh aPower battery in Australia and New…

4 May 2026

Big batteries set new charging records, despite lack of price volatility

Big batteries are doing two things at once: earning routine margin from ordinary solar-shaped days,…

4 May 2026

No more Dark Side of the Grid: The fossil fuel empire loses ground to renewables and storage

Australia's regions used to be the very definition of the grid’s dark side: expensive diesel,…

4 May 2026