Solar

Townsville office complex, and Adani Carmichael coal mine HQ, goes solar

Published by

One Step Off The Grid

Brisbane-based Sentinel Property Group continued its portfolio-wide shift to solar last week, with the installation of a 100kW PV system at its River Quays building in Townsville – an office complex whose tenants include Indian mining giant Adani Resources.

The project is a relatively small one for Sentinel and commercial solar partner GEM Energy, compared to the impressive 1.3MW system installed at the Cairns DFO (Direct Factory Outlet) shopping centre over a five month period in the second hald of last year.

Nonetheless it has grabbed the attention of the press, no doubt due to the newly solar powered building being the North Queensland home base for Adani’s controversial and decidedly-not-renewable Carmichael coal and rail project.

The building’s high profile list of tenants was a draw card for Sentinel when it bought the office tower in 2017 for a price of $A28.6 million. As well as Adani, they included Telstra and Adani’s soon to be ex-engineering contractor for the Carmichael rail project, Aecom.

The installation of solar at River Quays is part of Sentinal’s plans to invest heavily in renewable energy and adopt solar power systems across much of its property portfolio.

“Solar is one of the cleanest sources of energy,” said Sentinel managing director Warren Ebert in comments last October.

“By reducing greenhouse gases, improving air quality and conserving our water supply, solar energy assists in the reduction of our reliance on fossil fuels and will lower energy prices for years to come.”

GEM Energy said on Facebook that the 99.6kW system, which it began installing last Thursday, would “significantly reduce” the grid electricity consumption of the site.

“This project is part of our large commercial solar partnership with Sentinel Property Group,” GEM said.

The system was designed with 380W Canadian Solar panels and 4 Fronius 20kW inverters.

To read the original version of this article on RenewEconomy sister site, One Step Off The Grid, click here…

RenewEconomy and its sister sites One Step Off The Grid and The Driven will continue to publish throughout the Covid-19 crisis, posting good news about technology and project development, and holding government, regulators and business to account. But as the conference market evaporates, and some advertisers pull in their budgets, readers can help by making a voluntary donation here to help ensure we can continue to offer the service free of charge and to as wide an audience as possible. Thankyou for your support.

Sophie Vorrath

Sophie is editor of One Step Off The Grid and deputy editor of its sister site, Renew Economy. 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

Build it and they will come: Transmission is key, but LNP make it harder and costlier

Transmission remains the fundamental building block to decarbonising the grid. But the LNP is making…

23 December 2024

Snowy Hunter gas project hit by more delays and blowouts, with total cost now more than $2 billion

Snowy blames bad weather for yet more delays to controversial Hunter gas project, now expected…

23 December 2024

Happy holidays: We will be back soon

In 2024, Renew Economy's traffic jumped 50 per cent to more than 24 million page…

20 December 2024

Solar Insiders Podcast: A roller coaster year in review – and the keys to a smoother 2025

In our final episode for the year, SunWiz's Warwick Johnston on the highs and the…

20 December 2024

CEFC creates buzz with record investment in poles and wires, as Marinus bill blows out again

CEFC winds up 2024 with record investment in two huge transmission projects, as Marinus reveals…

20 December 2024

How big utilities manipulate the energy market, even with a high share of wind and solar

Regulator says big energy players are manipulating prices to their benefit. It's not illegal, but…

20 December 2024