Harnessing our renewable energy

The world is moving away from fossil-fuel generation to renewable resources to reduce emissions and mitigate the effects of climate change.

Tasmania was the first Australian jurisdiction to achieve net zero emissions, and has done so for the last seven years. In 2020, Tasmania achieved 100% net self-sufficiency in renewable energy generation - one of only a handful of jurisdictions in the world to do so.

Building on from this strong foundation, the Tasmanian Government's vision is to increase renewable energy generation to 200% of our current needs.

Growth of our state's renewable sector requires strategic planning and coordination to harness our renewable energy to secure a sustainable and clean energy future.

The work to achieve this vision will be guided by the Renewable Energy Coordination Framework (PDF 2.6 MB) which focuses on four key pillars with associated priority actions:

  • integrated infrastructure
  • community
  • environment
  • economic

Getting alignment and balance across all pillars will ensure large scale renewable energy development occurs in the right place, at the right time to deliver positive benefits for our state and communities.

Implementation plan

The Framework includes an implementation plan that identifies eleven key actions required in the next two years.

Since the release of the Framework in April 2022, most actions have been completed, including:

  • ReCFIT ran a Register of Interest process in 2022 which attracted a significant response with commercial interest in developing renewable generation, load and storage across Tasmania.
  • The identification of the northwest of the state in December 2022 to be the first region to be explored further for its capacity to become Tasmania's first REZ informed by scenario planning and preliminary spatial analysis, and advice from TasNetworks
  • release of a Tasmanian-specific guideline for community engagement and benefit sharing for renewable energy - a resource accessible to government, developers and communities to guide this process.
  • Commencement of engagement on REZ objectives and outcomes and establishment process

The Framework also considers other key factors including environmental, cultural, and social aspects as well as genuine community engagement and partnering that will deliver meaningful value in developing Tasmania's REZ.

An ROI was open from 15 June 2022 to 13 July 2022.

Who participated?

The ROI sought responses from generation and load projects seeking to utilise Tasmania's world leading renewable energy resources. Specifically, the ROI encouraged response from:

  • Renewable electricity generation projects (including offshore developments) of 10 MW or greater;
  • Industry/businesses with new or increased electrical loads of 1MW or greater; and
  • Existing load proponents looking to source electricity from new renewable projects.

Submissions were sought from projects in the very early stages of development, all the way up to well advanced or existing projects. A total of 31 submissions were received through the ROI, with 52 projects submitted.

Key findings

The ROI identified significant interest in Tasmania's renewable sector.

Commercial interest was registered in:

  • 15 onshore and 4 offshore wind projects;
  • 3 solar projects;
  • 2 mini-hydro projects;
  • 10 battery storage projects;
  • 12 new load projects, including hydrogen developments; and
  • 6 existing load customers seeking to expand.

The ROI collectively identified a large quantum of potential renewable energy generation (28GW), storage projects (2.6GW) and load projects (4.7GW) seeking to harness Tasmania's renewable energy resources.

These projects are at different stages in their development, some currently conceptual with planned commissioning dates more than a decade away, while others are well advanced through the approvals process and can support short to medium term load projects.

The ROI identified more than 7GW of potential renewable energy currently seeking approval and aiming to have commenced commercial operation by the end of 2030. This is significantly more than the amount of new generation required to meet the TRET's interim target.

We will continue with the actions underway as part of the implementation plan which are important to the establishment of the pathways to achieve the TRET.

This includes investigations into market mechanisms and working with Tasmanian Government agencies to review the approvals and assessment processes for major renewables projects in the context of the scale and pace of the transition underway.