Electricity infrastructure project
Australia?Asia Power Link
|
---|
|
Country
| Australia
|
---|
State
| Northern Territory
|
---|
|
Owner
| Sun Cable
|
---|
|
Expected
| 2027 (projected)
[1]
|
---|
Commissioned
| A$
35 billion
|
---|
|
Power rating
| 17-20
GW
|
---|
The
Australia?Asia Power Link
(
AAPowerLink
) is a proposed electricity infrastructure project that is planned to include the
world's largest solar plant
, the world's largest battery, and the world's longest
submarine power cable
.
Initial plans forecast that a new
solar farm
in the
Northern Territory
of Australia would produce up to 20
gigawatts
of electricity, most of which would be exported to Singapore, and at a later point Indonesia, by a 4,500 km (2,800 mi) 3 GW
HVDC
transmission line. A large battery would store energy in order to level energy availability as sunlight varies throughout the day.
[2]
AAPowerLink has been developed by an Australian company
Sun Cable
, initially backed by
Andrew Forrest
and
Mike Cannon-Brookes
. It was projected to begin construction in mid-2023, with operation starting in early 2026 and completion by late 2027,
[1]
and estimated to add
A$
8 billion to the economy of the Northern Territory.
[3]
[4]
The project collapsed in January 2023, after Sun Cable was placed into
voluntary administration
following a disagreement between Forrest and Cannon-Brookes about the need to put more funding into the venture.
[5]
[6]
In May 2023, a consortium led by Cannon-Brookes' Grok Ventures won the bid to acquire Sun Cable,
[7]
with the takeover finalised on 7 September 2023. The revised plans involve supplying electricity to Darwin by 2030, and to Singapore a few years thereafter. Eventually the solar farm would produce 6 gigawatts of power.
[8]
Design
[
edit
]
The solar plant would be in the Northern Territory near
Elliott
and
Tennant Creek
in the
Barkly Region
, using photovoltaic modules designed by Australian company 5B and prefabricated at a proposed factory in
Darwin
.
[2]
The solar panels will cover 12,000 ha (30,000 acres) (12 km x 10 km) in an area with some of the best solar resources in the world.
[9]
An 800 km (500 mi) overhead power line will transmit 6.4 GW
[10]
to Darwin, where it will transfer to a 4,500 km (2,800 mi) 2.2 GW undersea power line to Singapore.
[11]
This undersea cable will be the longest undersea cable in the world, exceeding the existing longest undersea power cable by a factor of around five.
[12]
[13]
Batteries at the solar array in Darwin and Singapore will provide load-balancing for continuous daily dispatch.
[14]
Singapore produced 95% of its electricity in 2015 from natural gas, but seeks to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions.
[15]
The AAPowerLink could provide about 20% of Singapore's electricity, with no carbon dioxide generation, reducing Singapore's emissions by 6 million tonnes per year.
[11]
In September 2021, it was announced that there would be further expansions to the proposed size of the project, from 10 GW to 20 GW capacity, and from 20 GWh to 36-42 GWh of battery storage, with a new estimated construction cost of $30 billion dollars. Forecasts suggest up to $A2 billion in exports, 1500 jobs in construction, 350 operational jobs, and 12,000 indirect jobs will be created across Australia, Singapore and Indonesia.
[16]
Development
[
edit
]
The project was initially called the Australia?Singapore Power Link, as the power line will initially connect those two countries. It was later renamed to Australia-ASEAN, and again to Australia-Asia, as it was also planned to bring electricity to Indonesia.
[17]
[18]
Sun Cable intended to secure all financing by late 2023, beginning construction the following year. It was expected to cost
A$
30 billion (US$22.6 billion).
[19]
[16]
[2]
Initial investments came from billionaires
Mike Cannon-Brookes
and
Andrew Forrest
.
[20]
[21]
In July 2019, the project received major project status from the
Northern Territory Government
, ensuring local support in development and construction.
[14]
The
federal government
awarded the same status in July 2020, expediting construction by facilitating coordination and permitting.
[11]
Singapore had not yet permitted the project,
[11]
but benefits for it include long-term electricity price stability, the potential to become a hub for trading renewable electricity in the Southeast Asian power grid,
[22]
and meeting its agreements to cut emissions under the
Paris Agreement
.
[23]
Undersea surveying of the Australian section of the (AAPL) cable route was completed in 2020 by Guardian Geomatics.
[24]
[25]
A project development agreement was signed between the NT Government and Sun Cable in January 2021, providing for commercial partnership.
[4]
An Integrated Project Delivery Team (IPDT) composed of multi-disciplinary international partners was announced in October 2021, including
Bechtel
(Project Delivery),
Hatch Ltd
(HVDC Tramission),
Marsh
(Risk Management),
PwC Australia
(Project Advisory) and
SMEC
(Solar Generation System).
[26]
Construction was projected to require 1,000 jobs, and operation will have 300 jobs in the Northern Territory.
[14]
As of 2021, it was expected to deliver first supply of electricity to Darwin in 2026, Singapore in 2027 with full capacity by end of 2028.
[3]
Australia is the world's largest exporter of coal. The AAPowerLink, along with the proposed wind and solar
Asian Renewable Energy Hub
in the
Pilbara
, would make it a "green energy exporting superpower."
[27]
2023: temporary administration
[
edit
]
In January 2023, Sun Cable went into
voluntary administration
.
[28]
The
Financial Times
reported that the administration was caused after lead investors Forrest and Cannon-Brooks "clashed... over the terms of a new funding round", itself necessitated "since the project started missing milestones".
[5]
In March 2022, it was announced that Sun Cable raised
A$
210m (€139m) Series B capital to fund the continued development of the project. The round was led by
Grok Ventures
(owned by Cannon-Brookes) and
Squadron Energy
(owned by Forrest).
[29]
As of 5 May 2023
[update]
, a process for the sale of the company has attracted four bidders, including Squadron and Grok.
[30]
In May 2023, a consortium led by Grok Ventures and including Quinbrook Infrastructure Partners won the bid to acquire Sun Cable.
[7]
Grok put A$65m into Sun Cable during its period in administration, and the takeover was finalised on 7 September 2023. The project aims to supply electricity to Darwin by 2030 (900 megawatts initially), and to Singapore a few years thereafter. Eventually the solar farm would produce 6 gigawatts of energy.
[8]
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
a
b
"Power Generation | Singapore | Sun Cable"
.
Sun Cable
. 24 November 2020. Archived from
the original
on 9 August 2020
. Retrieved
24 November
2020
.
- ^
a
b
c
"Australia Fast Tracks Approval Process for $16 Billion Solar Power Export Project"
.
Reuters
. 30 July 2020.
ISSN
0362-4331
. Retrieved
3 November
2020
.
- ^
a
b
Whitlock, Robin (20 October 2021).
"Sun Cable announces global expert team to deliver the Australia-Asia PowerLink project"
.
Renewable Energy Magazine
.
Archived
from the original on 23 November 2022
. Retrieved
21 October
2021
.
- ^
a
b
Carroll, David (28 January 2021).
"Major milestone for world's biggest solar project"
.
PV magazine Australia
. Retrieved
29 January
2021
.
- ^
a
b
Fildes, Nic (11 January 2023).
"Australian solar project collapses after clash between its two billionaire backers"
.
Financial Times
. Retrieved
11 January
2023
.
- ^
Mercer, Daniel (22 January 2023).
"Sun Cable demise shows renewable energy mega projects 'really hard'
"
.
ABC News
. Retrieved
7 February
2023
.
- ^
a
b
Morton, Adam (26 May 2023).
"Mike Cannon-Brookes wins control of Sun Cable solar project from Andrew Forrest"
.
The Guardian
.
ISSN
0261-3077
. Retrieved
26 May
2023
.
- ^
a
b
Hannam, Peter (7 September 2023).
"Sun Cable: Mike Cannon-Brookes takes charge of 'world-changing' solar project"
.
The Guardian
. Retrieved
9 September
2023
.
- ^
Morton, Adam (14 July 2019).
"
'Just a matter of when': the $20bn plan to power Singapore with Australian solar"
.
The Guardian
.
ISSN
0261-3077
. Retrieved
5 August
2020
.
- ^
"Environmental Impact Statement Summary"
(PDF)
- ^
a
b
c
d
Collins, Leigh (29 July 2020).
"Australia to fast-track world's largest solar-battery project with grid link to Singapore | Recharge"
.
Recharge
. Retrieved
5 August
2020
.
- ^
"Norway and UK complete world's longest undersea power cable"
.
The National
. 15 June 2021
. Retrieved
23 September
2021
.
- ^
"Work begins in Lincolnshire on world's longest subsea power cable"
.
The Guardian
. 13 July 2020
. Retrieved
23 September
2021
.
- ^
a
b
c
"Australia-Singapore Power Link awarded Major Project Status"
.
Utility Magazine
. 22 July 2019
. Retrieved
5 August
2020
.
- ^
Tan, Audrey (21 July 2015).
"From The Straits Times Archives: Singapore opts for cleaner energy sources"
.
The Straits Times
. Retrieved
5 August
2020
.
- ^
a
b
Vorrath, Sophie (23 September 2021).
"Sun Cable: World's biggest solar and battery project expands again, gets Indonesia approval"
.
RenewEconomy
. Retrieved
21 October
2021
.
- ^
Morrison, Kevin (30 July 2020).
"Canberra backs Australia power link to Singapore"
.
Argus Media
. Retrieved
5 August
2020
.
- ^
"World's biggest clean energy project to power Singapore from Australia"
. 29 September 2021
. Retrieved
18 October
2021
.
- ^
"Bechtel, Hatch among firms to work on Australia-Asia PowerLink"
.
Reuters
. 20 October 2021
. Retrieved
21 October
2021
.
- ^
"Australian billionaire to fund Singapore subsea cable project"
.
Power Technology | Energy News and Market Analysis
. 25 September 2019
. Retrieved
5 August
2020
.
- ^
Keating, Cecilia (20 November 2019).
"Billionaires lead funding of 10GW Australia-Singapore power link"
.
PV Tech
. Retrieved
5 August
2020
.
- ^
Pearlman, Jonathan (21 July 2019).
"Aussie solar farm project aims to power up S'pore too"
.
The Straits Times
. Retrieved
5 August
2020
.
- ^
Mah, Paul (26 November 2019).
"Reducing the carbon footprint of Singapore"
.
Data Centre Dynamics
. Retrieved
5 August
2020
.
- ^
Chin, Neo Chai (29 May 2020).
"Cable route surveys to begin for Australia-Singapore solar sharing project"
.
Eco-Business
. Retrieved
5 August
2020
.
- ^
"Sun Cable Survey - Phase 1 Completed | Guardian Geomatics"
.
guardiangeomatics.com
. Retrieved
21 December
2022
.
- ^
Vorrath, Sophie (20 October 2021).
"Sun Cable names "powerhouse" to deliver world's biggest solar and battery project"
.
RenewEconomy
. Retrieved
21 October
2021
.
- ^
Macdonald-Smith, Angela (1 January 2020).
"Solar export vision to be put to the test"
.
Australian Financial Review
. Retrieved
5 August
2020
.
- ^
Williams, Perry (11 January 2023).
"Forrest, Cannon-Brookes-backed Sun Cable collapses into administration"
.
The Australian
. Retrieved
11 January
2023
.
- ^
Ltd, Renews (14 March 2022).
"Singapore, Oz power link crew raises €139m"
.
reNEWS - Renewable Energy News
. Retrieved
24 April
2022
.
- ^
Terzon, Emilia (5 May 2023).
"Sun Cable: Why Australia's two richest men are battling to control an unbuilt solar farm"
.
ABC News (Australia)
. Retrieved
5 May
2023
.
Further reading
[
edit
]
External links
[
edit
]