gippsland – Michmutters
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Renewable energy projects are taking off but where is the workforce?

The renewables industry has exploded in Victoria, with ambitious energy targets set by the state government and an abundance of job opportunities in the fledgling sector to be realised.

Gippsland, in south-eastern Victoria, has been touted as the golden child of the renewable energy industry.

The region has windy seas, extensive land resources, and existing grid infrastructure in the Latrobe Valley thanks to its coal mining legacy.

Thousands of jobs are set to be created during both construction and operational phases in the switch to renewable energies.

But in a job market crying out for people to fill 86,000 vacancies in rural and regional Australia, doubt remains on the ability to fill roles in the new industry.

In Australia, the labor force participation rate sits at 67 per cent, while in Gippsland, the rate is lower, varying between local government areas.

training gap

A recent renewable energy conference held in the region attracted interest overseas and nationwide interest.

Bernadette O’Connor, of Australian Renewables Academy (ARA), heads up a local organization tasked with training the workforce needed to work on renewables.

Ms O’Connor said mediocre participation rates should be seen as an opportunity to bring more people into the workforce.

The group has intentions to retrain skilled workers in the move away from the coal, oil and gas industries.

“We need to look at who’s existing in the sector to transition across to the renewable energy industry,” Ms O’Connor said.

“[We look at] what level and what skills. Who is not in the sector, but could be in the sector, because they’ve got skills that could transition.”

bernadette o'connor
Australian Renewables Academy director Bernadette O’Connor presenting at the the Gippsland New Energy Conference.(Supplied)

The federally funded ARA identifies entry level jobs and determines which people could be recruited with basic training.

Given offshore wind is in its infancy in Australia, skills and knowledge to train the workforce in the new technology will likely come from overseas initially.

Ms O’Connor said the industry was evolving at a fast pace, and communication around the sector’s resourcing needs was imperative.

“If we can have really good teachers who know how to teach and know how to facilitate learning, partnering with industry who know what the industry needs, then that would be the ideal scenario,” Ms O’Connor said.

Shift in thinking

Historically, the offshore oil and gas industry in Gippsland has attracted fly-in fly-out workers from across the country, but the number of interstate workers have dropped in the past few years, according to unions.

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Australia

Gippsland farmer ‘shocked’ by Crown land campsites announced by Victorian government

A Gippsland farmer has described his shock at the location of several new campsites being established on what he considers “totally inappropriate” sections of land licensed from the Victorian government.

The government last Friday published details of the first four camps in Gippsland — two are on the Wonnangatta River, and two are on the Dargo and Macalister Rivers — on the Crown land river frontage.

Access to many of the campsites is from narrow country roads with limited parking opportunities and strict conditions.

Trevor Archer manages the farm that hosts the Macalister River campsite and said it was “totally inappropriate” because there was “nowhere to park”.

The site is 4 kilometers from Cheyne’s Bridge Recreation Area, a campsite with toilet facilities popular among trail bike riders.

“It gave me a bit of a shock, actually,” Mr Archer said.

“I knew it was proposed but they hit us pretty quick with it.

“There’s nowhere to park. The closest safe park is 4 kilometers away [at Cheyne’s Bridge] on a dangerous windy narrow road.

“It’s an accident waiting to happen if people are on foot down there.”

A barbed wire farm fence runs alongside the narrow Licola Road.
The Macalister River campsite is currently accessed by jumping a fence on Licola Road.(Rural ABC: Peter Somerville)

Access to the campsite involves scaling a barbed wire fence beside a narrow two-lane road and walking through a paddock often grazed by Mr Archer’s cattle.

“The entry point is 40 meters from where I bring my cattle up a little cutting … and later in the year there are 130–140 cows and calves coming up here and I’ve got to try to get them through [the campers],” Mr Archer said.

“If someone’s here trying to unload their gear when I’ve got cows and calves coming in… it’s just not going to work.”

The Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning was contacted for comment.

The wide Macalister River flows between a rocky hill and green campsite.
The Macalister River Cheyne’s Bridge campground is 4 kilometers upstream from the new campsite.(Rural ABC: Peter Somerville)

Fulfilling an election commitment

The Labor government made a 2018 election commitment to open licensed Crown land river frontages to camping.

The land was previously accessible for day use, with the four campsites opened on areas that are frequently grazed by cattle.

The sites have to be accessed by foot, campers must keep portable toilets at least 50 meters away from waterways, or 100 meters away if burying human waste, and dogs and campfires are not permitted.

A dirt road adjacent to a shallow valley
A new campsite on the Wonnangatta River frontage must be accessed by foot.(Rural ABC: Peter Somerville)

Campers are welcome

Mr Archer said he was not opposed to having campers on the land but expected the 4km walk from Cheyne’s Bridge would deter many.

“I don’t see that anyone’s going to carry their gear 4 kilometers down the road, 4 kilometers back,” he said.

“And they can only get in that one entry and exit.”

Trevor stands on a ridge above a paddock leading down to the river.  He wears a broad hat and a dark jumper.
Trevor Archer worries how he will move cattle while campers are unloading equipment.(Rural ABC: Peter Somerville)

It would not be the first time campers have set up on the property.

“Before the 2007 flood when the river blew out and changed course, I had 14 sites where people could choose to camp,” Mr Archer said.

“But we had them where we wanted them. They were in a bend in the river and it didn’t interfere with our stock work or anything.”

A wide grassy farm paddock with rows of trees on either side.
Walk-in campers are allowed to set up on this site alongside the Macalister River.(Rural ABC: Peter Somerville)

Calls for a ‘level playing field’

Further downstream, Paradise Valley camp and caravan park operator Neil Williams was surprised to learn about the free campsite.

“It doesn’t really seem fair that we have to go through all the compliance rigors that we do, and the state government feels like it can open up a parcel of land for anyone at any time,” Mr Williams said.

He said many Paradise Valley guests had visited the park over many years.

But Mr Williams conceded he may lose business to the free campsites upstream.

“I’d just like everyone to be on a level playing field,” he said.

“There are caravan parks all over Victoria that have had to comply with Country Fire Authority regulations.

“There’s a whole host of other council health and safety compliance issues that we deal with on a regular basis and it all adds to our overheads.”

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Business

Gippsland offshore wind projects await federal government declaration

The burgeoning offshore wind industry is waiting on a declaration from the federal government to begin key works on the water.

There are five offshore wind farms planned off the Gippsland coast, with hopes to tap into the existing transmission infrastructure of the Latrobe Valley.

Under new legislation governing offshore wind farms passed by Parliament last year, operators are only allowed to undertake particular activities in zones designated for offshore wind development.

The most progressed project, Star of the South, plans to erect up to 200 turbines in the windy Gippsland waters.

Acting chief executive Erin Coldham said making the declaration would end the uncertainty facing the industry.

“We look forward to the declaration process starting. The end result would provide certainty for offshore wind projects in the region, like ours, which are standing ready and keen to progress,” she said.

“In the meantime, we’re getting on with our environmental assessments, onshore studies and ongoing community consultation to keep things moving.”

A map of the four proposed zones for wind farms
Gippsland has four offshore wind farms in the works.(abcnews)

Country manager for company BlueFloat Energy Nick Sankey echoed the sentiment.

“We are moving forward with our project development as much as we can, but until we have a feasibility license we are not able to deploy certain monitoring equipment and undertake a lot of studies in our site area that we would like to do,” he said.

General manager of development at Wellington Shire Brent McAlister has previously told the ABC there was a significant impetus for making the declaration quickly.

“It’s critical because there is a competition in the world for investment dollars and capital in offshore wind,” he said.

“But the money will go to those countries that have regulatory and licensing regimes in place so it’s crucial to attract investment.”

Meanwhile, the Victorian government has set a target of 4 gigawatts (GW) of generation by 2035 and 9GW by 2040.

To that end, the state government has funded four companies for scoping works: $19.5 million for Star of the South, $16.1 million for Corio and $2.3 million for Flotation Energy.

ABC Gippsland has lodged five requests to discuss offshore wind with federal Minister for Climate Change and Energy Chris Bowen since his re-election.

Renewables remain cheapest option

A recent report by Australia’s key scientific research agency, the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO), has reaffirmed that renewables remain the cheapest new-build option for energy.

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