Critical projects for
NSW’s clean energy future
The NSW Government has declared six renewable energy projects Critical State Significant Infrastructure (CSSI) given their potential significance to the NSW economy.
10 July 2024
THE new projects, if approved, will help maintain the state’s critical energy security and continue the essential energy supply to homes and businesses during peak-demand periods as coal-fire sources close.
A CSSI declaration means a project is deemed essential to NSW for economic, social and environmental reasons with the Minister for Planning and Public Spaces being the consent authority.
A comprehensive all-of-government assessment will still need to be undertaken on the projects including exhibition and an opportunity for submissions from the public.
The three proposed transmission projects will connect additional renewable energy generators into the National Energy Market to attract further investment in NSW, while the three proposed pumped hydro projects will provide reliable energy generation, capacity and dispatchable power when solar or wind resources are unavailable.
The six CSSI projects are:
Minister for Planning and Public Spaces Paul Scully said “I have declared these six important projects as Critical State Significant Infrastructure as they are significant to the NSW economy, society and the environment.
“The substantive increase in renewable energy proposals signals trust from the wider industry in our Government’s capacity to move projects through the planning system.
“These projects will be subject to a comprehensive assessment which will include a period of public exhibition seeking submissions from the community.”
Following the CSSI declaration, the Department of Planning, Housing and Infrastructure (DPHI) will issue Secretary’s Environmental Assessment Requirements to the proponent so they can prepare an Environment Impact Statement (EIS) for community feedback.
Since 2023, the Minns Government has approved 24 renewable energy State Significant Development assessments with a combined energy capacity to power 1.5 million homes.
There are currently up to 30 renewable energy projects under assessment. If approved, these REZ projects could produce up to 12.1 GW of energy to power about 5.6 million homes.
A further 87 projects, including solar, wind, battery storage and pumped hydro projects are at various stages in the planning pipeline.