05/12/2005
- Minister for the Environment and Heritage, Senator Ian
Campbell, and Minister for Industry, Tourism and Resources,
Ian Macfarlane, today announced eleven consortia from around
Australia have been short-listed in the race to host the
nation’s first Solar Cities. The
short-listed proposals are:
Adelaide Solar Citizens
Alice Springs – Australia’s Solar Centre
Blacktown Solar City
Brighter Future – Sydney Olympic Park / Auburn Solar City
Central Victorian Solar Cities Project
Coburg Solar City
Kalgoorlie-Boulder Solar Cities Project
Perth Solar City
Solar Cities Adelaide
Solar Newcastle
Townsville: Queensland Solar City
Each short-listed consortium will now receive $50,000
to help them prepare a detailed business case, which will
be assessed by an expert panel before a final decision
is made next year about the location of Australia’s Solar
Cities.
Senator Campbell said the short-listed
consortia were keen to help communities explore alternative
energy solutions that will better meet peoples’ energy
needs.
“This is an exciting new programme
that encourages the use of solar panels, smart meters
and energy efficient options along with a new approach
to electricity pricing,” he said.
“It will reward ‘energy wise’ consumers,
encourage business to test new sustainable energy options,
and enable data to be collected on the environmental and
economic costs of the initiative to help inform future
energy and greenhouse policy.”
Mr Macfarlane said at least four of
the 11 short-listed submissions would be selected to host
Solar Cities. One of these will be from Adelaide, as announced
by the Prime Minister earlier this year.
“The short-listed proposals were selected
from a total of 23 submissions throughout Australia, representing
most states and the Northern Territory. Australia has
really embraced the Solar Cities concept and is on track
to produce its first ‘energy-wise’ communities,” he said.
The $75 million Solar Cities programme,
announced in last year’s Energy White Paper, is part of
the Australian Government’s $1.8 billion climate change
strategy which aims to help build an effective global
response to climate change, encourage domestic action
to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and prepare industries
and communities for the impacts of climate change. |