Australian solar scheme to power Singapore via 4,500km transmission cable

Solar project could meet about one-fifth of city-state's power needs

epa08011020 A family (R) poses for a photograph in front of the financial district in Singapore, 20 November 2019. The European Union-Singapore Free Trade Agreement (EUSFTA) will come into effect on 21 November and put EU-based businesses closer to one of the world's fastest growing consumer markets. The EUSFTA is the first such agreement from the 28-nation European bloc in Southeast Asia, with Singapore agreeing to remove all tariffs from EU products while the EU will remove tariffs from 84 per cent of Singaporean products with the remaining tariffs to be phased out over the course of the next three to five years.  EPA/WALLACE WOON
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Two of Australia’s richest people, Atlassian Corporation co-founder Mike Cannon-Brookes and Fortescue Metals Group chairman Andrew Forrest, are investing in an ambitious project to export solar power from a giant plant in Australia to Singapore via a 4,500 kilometre transmission cable.

The project raised tens of millions of Australian dollars that will allow it to undertake development work ahead of an expected financial close in late 2023, according to developer Sun Cable’s chief executive David Griffin and a company statement. The plan incorporates a 10 gigawatt solar facility, which the company says will be the world’s biggest, as well as battery storage.

“Each of these elements is pushing the limits of engineering, but not impossible,” Mr Cannon-Brookes, a campaigner for clean energy, said at an event on Wednesday evening in Sydney. “On a global level, this will be innovative for many years to come.”

The project could meet around a fifth of Singapore’s energy needs, according to Sun Cable, helping to reduce the city-state’s reliance on natural gas imports. The company is in discussions about offtake of the power, Mr Griffin said in an email, without naming potential counterparties. “This will take quite a while to finalise,” he said.

Singapore’s electricity industry regulator, the Energy Markets Authority, said in an email Wednesday that it has had meetings with Sun Cable but was unable to comment further due to commercial sensitivities. The nation’s power and gas utility, SP Group, declined to comment.

Grok Ventures, the private investment vehicle of Cannon-Brookes, and Squadron Energy, a natural resources exploration and development company set up by Forrest, were the co-lead investors on the capital raise, according to Sun Cable’s statement. The total capital cost is seen in the region of A$20 billion (Dh50bn), with commercial operations targeted to start in 2027.