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State-Owned Renewable Energy Company to Be Embedded in Victorian Constitution

A.Davis2 hr ago

Government-owned power will be enshrined in the Victorian Constitution following a vote in the state's lower house of Parliament.

The State Electricity Commission (SEC) will be locked in public hands in a bid to protect it from privatisation by a future political party or government.

During the parliamentary debate, Climate Action Minister Lily D'Ambrosio said the move was "enshrining the SEC, 100 percent renewable, in the constitution."

The legislation passed the upper house in September before being returned to the Legislative Assembly with amendments on Oct. 15, where it passed with 54 votes in favour and 25 against.

Speaking in Parliament, Minister D'Ambrosio said Victoria's energy systems should "never have been sold off" in the first place.

She added that 4.5 gigawatts of new renewables would replace coal and new projects would be owned by "every Victorian to benefit every Victorian."

D'Ambrosio told Parliament the bill would stop the electricity commission from owning, operating or investing in a fossil fuel facility.

"And that is reliable, affordable and security energy," he said in Parliament on Oct. 15.

"What we hear from that side of the chamber is ideology, not just in the speech on the amendments today. Follow the minister on Twitter and you can see not just ideological wars in Victoria but fights with the federal government on energy ideology—fights over ideology with the federal government in relation to energy supply."

Newbury said nothing meaningful had happened to the SEC since the last election nearly two years ago.

On Oct. 15, Victorian Labor MP Dylan Wight told Parliament the state-owned SEC would now "turbocharge Victoria's transition to a renewable energy future."

"I have spoken on several occasions in this place about the Allan Labor government's incredibly ambitious renewable energy targets. They are most certainly the most ambitious of any jurisdiction in this country and indeed some of the most ambitious of any jurisdiction anywhere right around the world," he said.

"Yes, actually, we do have a battery, which lasts for about 1 hour and 12 minutes if it is running at its full capacity, to generate power for the people of Victoria," he said.

"We are putting a lot of our energy into batteries, into wind farms and also into solar farms, but what they renege on and do not tell us is the price that it is going to cost to build the transmission lines to carry the power to get it to the power station so that we can have beautiful, clean, green energy here in Melbourne, where we sit."

Cameron added they rely on green energy coming from regional Victoria because they do not want to have wind turbines in the inner city of Melbourne.

"No, we don't want to look at them, because that's a little bit of pollution that's going to be a little bit hard on the eyes, and we can't palate that. So we'll throw that out and dump that out right around regional Victoria, and then we'll build all these transmission lines, which are going to rip across beautiful farming land," he said.

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