Australia’s National Wind Farm Commissioner’s role will be expanded to cover new major transmission projects from Friday.
Andrew Dyer, who took office in 2015, will now be known as the Australian Energy Infrastructure Commissioner and will help to resolve complaints and concerns about transmission projects regarding the design, planning, construction, and operation phases. He will also assist industry and government to adopt best practices when deploying projects.
“As these critically important transmission projects take shape, we want to ensure that any concerns community members have are heard and resolved in the appropriate way, and the Commissioner’s expanded role will facilitate this.”
An example is the concern over Hume Link, a Government-supported transmission project which will transmit power from Snowy Hydro south of Canberra to the main electricity grid.
This comes at a time when the US Department of Energy will fund a commercial-scale test for an energy-storing technology in partnership with the Australian Solar Thermal Research Initiative (ASTRI).
Developed with input from CSIRO, the Australian National University, and the University of Adelaide, this technology converts sunlight into stored thermal energy, which can then be used to power turbines and generate electricity on demand at any time.
“Zero emissions, dispatchable energy sources like concentrated solar thermal storage will be needed to back up increasing shares of renewable energy.”
A pilot-scale facility in Newcastle, built by CSIRO, will be tested for the first time in the coming weeks.