Daily update: Community electricity retailer to take on Australia’s big three

Uncategorized0

ck here to enable desktop notifications for Gmail.   Learn more  Hide

1 of 1
Why this ad?
Solar Panels Cost Expertssolarquotes.com.au/You_Can_Go_Solar – 1 Form – 2 Minutes – 3 Free Quotes. Join More Than A Million Aussies!

Daily update: Community electricity retailer to take on Australia’s big three

Inbox
x

RenewEconomy editor@reneweconomy.com.au via mail66.atl111.rsgsv.net

1:59 PM (17 minutes ago)

to me
Plan to create Australia’s first community-owned energy retailer underway in northern NSW; IMF calls for higher taxes on fossil fuels; AGL project development team folds; Queenslanders look to renewables as new ‘norm’; is Australia destined to be a carbon banana republic?; how wind, wave and solar could power California; 3 White House charts we need to see; Arizona’s public service turns hand to solar; and why the Energiewende’s opponents are fearful it will work.
Is this email not displaying correctly?
View it in your browser.
RenewEconomy Daily News
The Parkinson Report
A NSW consortium has revealed that its plan to create Australia’s first community-owned energy retailer are underway, in what could be the first attempt to challenge the dominance of the incumbent retailers with a completely new concept in energy delivery.
IMF report calls for energy taxes to be raised to reflect environmental and health impact, singles out coal as ‘about the dirtiest of all fuels.’
AGL Energy downsizes project development team and absorbs it into another department – another sign the outlook for renewable energy in Australia is poor.
Queenslanders say they want renewable energy to become the norm. The Newman government responds by suggesting they subscribe to think tanks.
The idea of tackling Australia’s carbon pollution is sound. But at tax payer expense? Coming from a Liberal Party? That’s as bent as a …banana.
Updated: Shoalhaven community energy group offers 6.5% return in 99kW solar system at NSW bowling club. Construction starts next week.
New study shows California could convert to an all-renewable energy infrastructure that is both technically and economically feasible.
A new White House report explains why Obama appears to be acting on the issue of climate change with a sense of urgency: “delay is costly”.
After a long fight with the solar industry, APS now wants to get into the solar business itself. Industry reactions are mixed.
IER says angst is a main driver behind the Energiewende, which will fail to reduce emissions without shale gas, especially without nuclear.

Leave a Comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.