In short: A new North West town for 8,000 people will no longer be built as part of a massive renewable energy project when it re-seeks environment approvals. The federal environment law has been criticised for rejecting more renewable projects than fossil fuel ones. What’s next? The proponent behind the North West energy project expects to submit an environmental application this year.
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It would have been halfway along the lonely stretch between tourist mecca Broome and the iron ore shipping capital of Port Hedland.
A new town for 8,000 workers, their families and all the services and additional people you would need for such a population in Australia’s remote North West region.
A town built using the latest in sustainability principles to service one of the world’s largest renewable energy projects which covers more than 6,500 square kilometres of spinifex-dominated sand plains.
With a 26 gigawatt capacity — which is enough energy to meet a third of Australia’s demand in 2020 — the Australian Renewable Energy Hub wind and solar project would have created green hydrogen and ammonia for export.
Well that was the plan.