19 July 2024

Belco backlash: Barr writes to Minns over Wallaroo solar farm

| Ian Bushnell
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Woman speaking into microphone

Ginninderra MLA Tara Cheyne wants Belconnen residents to understand what’s proposed and be heard. MLA. Photo: Michelle Kroll.

The ACT Government has made its concerns about the siting of the proposed Wallaroo solar farm known to the Minns Government as more Belconnen residents become aware of the massive renewable energy development just across the border.

Ginninderra MLA Tara Cheyne, who attended Thursday’s public meeting in Murrumbateman with the NSW Independent Planning Commission, said Chief Minister Andrew Barr had written to Premier Chris Minns requesting that ACT residents be more included in the consultation.

“The Chief Minister has written to Premier Minns seeking support that the Commission’s process provides appropriate opportunities for ACT and cross-border residents to engage and provide input, given the only hearing proposed so far was a four-hour commitment beginning at 10 am on a weekday in Murrumbateman,” she said.

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Ms Cheyne said she wanted all residents and businesses within proximity of the proposed solar farm site to have an understanding of what is proposed and have ample opportunity to comment.

She said residents in Dunlop and Macgregor lived less than one kilometre away from the proposed site, which was also very close to the Ginninderry proposed Future Urban Area, and there was only one road into Wallaroo – Wallaroo Road – that starts within the ACT border off the Barton Highway.

The risk of bushfires is also believed to be an ACT concern.

The Commission will decide on the $166 million proposal from New Energy Development and Univergy International, which will involve the installation of 182,000 photovoltaic modules on steel piles and associated infrastructure, including battery storage and a substation connected to nearby transmission lines.

The proponents, who will lease the land, say the project will feed electricity into the transmission network and be capable of producing enough clean, renewable energy to supply about 48,000 homes in NSW and the ACT.

But nearby residents and landholders say it will be an eyesore and impact the rural character of the area, the environment and tourism, as well as pose noise, dust and pollution risks.

map of proposed solar farm

Too close? Macgregor and Dunlop residents will be closest to the proposed solar farm. Image: NGH.

The ACT Government’s current interest is a far cry from that in 2022 when Liberal MLA Elizabeth Kikkert asked a number of questions about the project in the Legislative Assembly but was told by Water, Energy and Emissions Reduction Shane Rattenbury that the project was in NSW and she should seek answers from the proponents.

But the ACT election will be held in October and the Belconnen-based electorate of Ginninderra is probably the most unpredictable of the five.

The Belconnen Community Council, which does not hold a position on the project, feels it has not been consulted, despite being considered a special interest group.

The Council was only contacted on 14 June 2023, a week before submissions closed on 20 June 2023.

Chair Lachlan Butler, who lives in Dunlop and briefly attended on Thursday, given it was a work day, said a lot of people were feeling shut out of the process.

He said thousands of people lived along the border and they should not be excluded from the consultation.

Mr Butler said the proponent was almost exploiting a loophole because of the border.

He said the fact that it was a renewable energy project could have swayed the ACT Government earlier, but it should be more involved.

“If someone was proposing a nuclear waste dump in Queanbeyan … I don’t think the ACT Government would say, ‘Oh, well, it’s in New South Wales’,” he said.

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A key point in the debate is that in NSW these kinds of developments would not be sited within 5 km of a major suburb or town.

Mr Butler said the project should not be an exception because of an invisible border.

“At the end of the day, if it stacks up and they follow all the rules and not pretend like thousands of people don’t exist, and if they consider all that and they would do the same thing in Sydney or Wollongong or another area, I think that would probably take a little bit of attention out of it,” he said.

Opponents have said they are not anti-renewables but that the proposal is in the wrong location.

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Tom McLuckie9:29 am 23 Jul 24

Minister Cheyne has been invited to attend the Tralee Residents Association meetings, just over the border in NSW, to discuss concerns at delays of upgrades from Lanyon Drive / South Jerrabomberra and to Isabella Plains roundabout for connection to Monaro Highway. To date there has been no response. So up to 2000 vehicles per day doing an extra 8 km per journey at a minimum (even further if they are travelling south). Tralee is a little bit closer than Murrumbateman. Suddenly she cares about her constituents and those over the border?

Isn’t this the land that the ACT Govt. was proposing to take off NSW a couple of years ago to expand into?

Askin’ for a friend……..

Better Planning9:16 am 22 Jul 24

Is there not a MOU between the ACT and NSW Governments for regional cooperation which noone ever talks about and the media seem to be clueless about it.

Capital Retro11:35 am 22 Jul 24

Indeed there is and I believe the coordinator is based in Armidale NSW.

SAVE THE PLANET! BAN COAL! BAN FRACKING! SAY NO TO NUCLEAR! But don’t put it where I can see it.

More of the Tara “Have your say” show. Invite feedback then ignore it. It’s time for a change bye bye Tara.

gary phillips12:22 am 21 Jul 24

Odd place to build a solar farm, obvious place for a new suburb in 20 years time which would make a bunch more $

Rupert Samuel7:44 am 24 Jul 24

Solar farms will always be in odd places, as they require large amounts of land with access to heavy duty electricity infrastructure. At least some sheep will get cover from the frost and summer sun while they graze under the panels.

Looks like its Karma….it was OK for the ACT Government to build solar farms at Royalla and Mugga Lane without supporting residents concerns, but as soon as an election is pending, its very concerned. Also not a word from the Greens…..ohh that why… its a solar farm

I am surprised given how little anyone seems to care about the new Royalla quarry which is going to be ugly, xreate extra traffic on the supporting major roads, generate a lot of noise, dust, and probably damage to homes in Googong and royalla than a quiet but just ugly solar farm….

Looks like this is payback for siting the correctional centre so close to Jerrabomberra.

Incidental Tourist11:10 am 20 Jul 24

You can’t blame Wallaroo solar farm project to reuse Barr’s narrative from Mugga lane solar farm project. So in a letter to Minns Barr looks arguing that they did not copy his narrative and mechanical motions good enough. Whatever the fuss is, the silence from Greens is loudest. Where is Jo Clay, Greens Ginninderra MLA standing by their residents? As Shakespeare wrote “Sound and fury, signifying nothing”.

Well Incidental Tourist I am not the biggest fan of the Greens and our government’s alliance with them but why would any of them come out and advocate against a solar farm? Advocating against such a proposal goes against everything the Greens or Labor stands for.

Vanessa Vassaroti, Jo Clay and colleague Emma Davidson (Human Rights Minister and the most disappointing and underperforming Minister in the government) are the most extreme members of the Greens. The bastions of human rights, they have been busy with their federal colleagues, wearing keffiyehs and travelling around the country, whipping up hostility at protest events. Minister Davidson, at one protest event and sailing around in a plastic buggy, refused to answer media questions after a significant decision was handed down in the ACT Supreme Court on the human rights abuses currently being experienced in our prison, which are escalating under her watch. Shane Rattenbury, the ACT’s Attorney General and Corrections Minister also refused to comment.

The sooner our government severs ties with these misfits the better!

Incidental Tourist8:47 pm 20 Jul 24

I am not saying if Greens should oppose it. There are many details they could have consulted residents and add value. As a minimum they could join Cheyne on that public meeting in Murrumbateman. But the full silence from Greens sounds like Clay, Davidson, Braddock and Rattenbury completely lost interest in the green energy agenda.

GrumpyGrandpa9:39 pm 20 Jul 24

But that’s the problem Jack D. Mr Barr had the option to governed with in a minority government at the last election, but he chose instead, to enter into an alliance with The Greens.

It becomes very difficult for the ALP to now distance itself from The Greens, to the point where I believe the electorate will assume Mr Barr would do the same thing in October.

Rupert Samuel8:08 am 24 Jul 24

If be curious to know what feedback the Liberal member got when she followed up with the proponents?

I think that people have genuine concerns about this project and especially the lack of consultation. But this often happens when you hear about things later in the process than you’d prefer. Solar farms are big and they need solid grid access, so they turn up in sites like this.

At least they’re quiet neighbours. (And nowhere near as ugly or annoying as the current ute-o-sauruses that are destroying kerbs and footpaths everywhere.)

Give me a solar farm over a nuclear reactor, anyday.

The Chief Minister’s action may be too little too late. It is disgraceful that the project proposal for an industrial sized solar farm between the West Belconnen border and the community of Wallaroo. Both the Chief Minister and the project owners have completely ignored the implications for the city of Canberra. The project plans to locate 182,000 solar panels up against the West Belconnen border. Despite the developer’s minimal effort to disguise them, they have not taken into account the topography on this side of the border and think the risk of fire in this area as low! Or what it would mean to West Belco residents who would be affected. There are many more problems that have not been revealed including environmental issues and the destruction livelihoods.

I am surprised given how little anyone seems to care about the new Royalla quarry which is going to be ugly, xreate extra traffic on the supporting major roads, generate a lot of noise, dust, and probably damage to homes in Tuggers, Googong, and Royalla than a quiet but just ugly solar farm…. but let’s be honest Belconnen is probably worth more money.

Locking up more productive farmland to further the climate change fairy story it appears…..

Do the solar farms get govt subsidies to put in these eye sores?

Do farmers get similar subsidies per hectare of land?

Just askin’…..

Minister Cheyne always waves her hands around and talks in riddles, she is doing a brilliant job to help the Liberals in October.

GrumpyGrandpa6:55 pm 19 Jul 24

Up to now, the ACT Government have been falling over themselves to electrify everything with renewable energy. With an election around the corner, the prospects of a large solar development impacting the voting intentions of West Belconnen residents, seems more important. 🤔

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