Business
NSW sets itself for biggest and quickest transition from coal to renewables – RenewEconomy
NSW calls for 8GW of wind, solar and storage, as it prepares for the biggest and most rapid transition from coal to renewables in the country.

The AEMO ISP canvasses various scenarios from slow, through to central, and fast, and the step change that meets the Paris climate targets of 1.5°C.
The pace of change in NSW will be extraordinary, as shown in this chart above and table below. According to AEMO, coal generation represented in black will disappear in the step change scenario in NSW, the country’s biggest electricity market, and will be replaced by solar, wind and storage.
In other states, some coal generators continue on in Queensland and Victoria and W.A after 2040. That means NSW, from having the biggest coal fleet in the country, will join South Australia and Tasmania in having no coal fleet at all.
In AEMO’s central scenario, the New England REZ is not needed until around 2035/36, but in the step change scenerio, the first stages are needed within five years, and that seems to be the time table that NSW is adoptiong.
Indeed, AEMO identifies New England and the neighbouring north west region as the biggest renewable energy zone in the country. “New England will become a NSW powerhouse,” Kean says in the statement, adding that the government is tipping in $79 million to advance the process.
Kean made the announcement in company with state Nationals leader and deputy premier John Barilaro, mostly known in energy circles for his support of nuclear power.
The New England REZ is expected to attract $12.7 billion in investment, support 2,000 construction jobs and 1,300 ongoing jobs all while lowering energy prices and future- proofing the regions, Barilaro said in the joint statement
Regional NSW is the best place in Australia for renewable energy investment and the jobs it creates, and this funding allows us to unlock that potential.
Also present was the state National Party member for Northern Tablelands, Adam Marshall, a renewables enthusiast who says the REZ represents an excellent opportunity for the region to create jobs, diversify its local economy and improve local roads and telecommunications infrastructure.
Our region is fast becoming the renewables capital of NSW and were home to some of thebest renewable energy resources in the country, with flagship wind and solar projects atGlen Innes and Armidale living proof of this potential, Marshall said.
That’s a welcome change from the views expressed by the federal member for New England, and former Nationals leader and deputy prime minister Barnaby Joyce, who has resumed his attacks on renewables in the past week, with a proposed wind farm near the village of Nundle the focus of his latest attacks.
Walcha Energy, which proposes a 4,000MW renewables hub within the New England renewable energy zone, also welcoming the decision by NSW to fast-track the creation of the new REZ.
Its projects include the 700MW Salisbury solar farm, the 700MW Ruby Hills wind farm and the 330kv Uralla Renewable Energy Hub, with options for battery and pumped hydro storage and a point of connection for multiple projects.
We believe sharing the benefits of the development of renewable energy zones should be a priority for all renewable energy developers, and would urge the NSW Government to ensure community benefit sharing approaches become standard practice across the New England zone, Simon Currie, a director of Energy Estate, one of Walcha’s proponents, said in a statement.

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