Shenhua Group Corp., China’s biggest coal producer, and Hydro Tasmania could jointly invest A$1.6 billion ($1.7 billion) by the end of the decade to build Australian wind farms.
The Chinese company and Hydro Tasmania reached an agreement to evaluate a further 700 megawatts of wind projects, expanding their partnership on previous developments, the Australian energy company said April 9. The two companies haven’t identified any specific projects, Hobart-based Hydro Tasmania said today in an e-mail.
Shenhua plans to increase spending in Australia to contribute to the government’s program to get one fifth of its electricity from renewable energy by 2020. Australia is forecast to have A$15.5 billion of investment in new wind farms in that period, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance.
Hydro Tasmania is studying a proposal to build a 600- megawatt wind project on Tasmania’s King Island estimated to cost A$2 billion. The Australian company completed a deal in February to sell 75 percent of its Musselroe wind farm to Shenhua unit Guohua Energy Investment Co. That follows a 2011 agreement to sell 75 percent of the Bluff Point and Studland Bay wind farms in Tasmania to the Shenhua unit.