Australia’s Capital Territory of Canberra has announced that it seeks to become 100% powered by renewable energy by 2025. The Australian Capital Territory (ACT) Labor Government announced to the ACT Labor Conference on Saturday
that it intends to build on its current plans to become 90% reliant
upon renewable energy by 2020, by pushing for 100% reliance by 2025.
“We can do this,” said
Andrew Barr, Chief Minister of the ACT. “We have shown it’s possible –
now we have one small step left. 100 percent renewable energy will drive
further jobs growth in our research and corporate sectors.” Barr also noted that such a goal will have a dramatically positive
impact on employment in the region as well. “We’ve already seen a 400
percent increase in renewable energy jobs in the past five years, and
there will be more to come,” he said.
Also commenting on the move was Environment Minister and Deputy Chief
Minister Simon Corbell, who said that the new 100% renewable energy
goal will mean “more jobs and more investment in the ACT economy.”
The move will also “see further reductions in [Canberra’s] greenhouse gas emissions,” Corbell continued.
“Most importantly it will see growth in the low-carbon economy, which
means jobs and investment in our city, in our universities and in our
research sectors. This is about seizing economic opportunity and
recognising the enormous global market in renewables and wanting to
attract some of that investment and some of that jobs growth to our
city.”
Unsurprisingly, the move was immediately criticized by the Liberal
Opposition leader, Jeremy Hanson, who said that such a target would send
power bills sky-rocketing. “Well we’re very supportive of renewable energy but the problem is if
you go to 100 per cent the cost of that is enormous, what we’re going
to see is power bills going up through the roof across Canberra,” he
said. “So already we’ve seen rates tripling and what Andrew Barr is now
going to do is make everybody’s power bill unaffordable.” Whether or not Mr Hanson’s figures are correct is a matter that will
surely be contested hotly in the days and weeks to come, especially in
the lead up to the next ACT election in 2016.
http://cleantechnica.com/2015/08/25/australian-capital-territory-aiming-100-renewable-2025/
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