| Australian developer plans 900 MW of solar for green hydrogen project 
 Traditional  owners in Western Australia will partner with advisory firm Pollination  to develop what could be Australia’s largest solar farm. The move is  part of plans to build a gigawatt-scale green hydrogen and ammonia  project in the northwestern part of the country.
 
 July 18, 2023  David Carroll
 
 Hydrogen
 Markets
 Markets & Policy
 Utility Scale PV
 Utility Scale Storage
 Australia
 
 
  Image: Nenad Stojkovic, Flickr
 
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 From  pv magazine Australia
 
 Australian  clean energy investor Pollination has revealed that it will build a 900  MW solar farm as part of the proposed AUD 3 billion ($2.05 billion)  East Kimberley Clean Energy Project. It says the installation will be  Australia’s first 100% renewable energy hydrogen and ammonia production  hub.
 
 The project, which is being developed near the town of  Kununurra, is expected to commence operations in 2028. It will target  50,000 tons of green hydrogen and 250,000 tons of green ammonia per  annum for domestic and export markets.
 
 The East Kimberley Clean  Energy Project will be planned, created and managed by the Aboriginal  Clean Energy (ACE) partnership, a new company in which equal shares are  held by the traditional owners of the land where the project is to be  built.
 
 MG Corp., representing the Miriuwung and Gajerron people,  and Balanggarra Aboriginal Corp. will each own a 25% stake in the ACE,  as will the Kimberley Land Council and Pollination. Rob Grant, head of  projects at Pollination, said the “first-of-its-kind partnership”  provides a model for infrastructure projects in Australia that will  ensure traditional owners benefit from the scale and pace of the  transition to renewable energy.
 
 “This project represents a just,  ambitious and achievable vision for Australia’s clean energy future,” he  said. “It leverages natural advantages and existing energy and port  infrastructure already in place in the East Kimberley region to create a  major new clean energy export hub that will help Australia and our  region decarbonise, grow new industries and ensure transitional owners  and local residents are shareholders, not just stakeholders, in the  benefits.”
 
 Grant  said the involvement of the traditional owner groups directly in the  project also offers attractive prospects to investors by mitigating  risks associated with land use agreements and approvals.
 
 
  Image: Pollination
 
 The first stage of the project will involve building a 900 MW solar farm – more than double the size of the  country’s biggest so far built – and a 50,000 tons per year green hydrogen plant on MG Corp. freehold land near Kununurra.
 
 The  resulting solar energy will be combined with fresh water from Lake  Kununurra and hydro energy from the existing Ord Hydro Power Plant at  Lake Argyle to produce green hydrogen that will then be transported  through a new pipeline to the “export ready” port of Wyndham. There it  will be converted into green ammonia. About 250,000 tons of green  ammonia will be produced every year for both domestic and export markets  in the fertilizers and explosives sectors.
 
 While the project’s  feasibility and funding are still pending, construction is expected to  begin in late 2025, with hydrogen production starting by late 2028.  Grant said scoping studies have already been completed to define the  project concept, and feasibility studies will now commence, including 12  months of environmental, engineering and approvals work.
 
 pv-magazine.com
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