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Power compo offer draws mixed response

March 7, 2023 BY

Energetic: Opposition to a high-voltage power line project in the region has been vocal along the proposed routes. Photo: FILE

A MOVE to pay landowners two-hundred thousand dollars per square kilometre for energy infrastructure imposed on their properties has been met with mixed reactions.

Residents living in the path of several projects in the region have previously protested against high-voltage power lines and towers more than 80 metres high on their land, and are calling for the infrastructure to be placed underground instead.

The projects are part of a wider move to shift the state to renewable energy as remaining coal-fired power stations are set to close over the next 12 years.

The first residents to receive payments will be those impacted by pylon line VNI West, likely connecting Ballarat in central Victoria with Kerang in the north and across to NSW, and the Western Renewables Link corridor from the Melbourne suburb of Sydenham to near Stawell in the state’s west.

The standard payments will be $8000 a year for 25 years for those with transmission easements on their land.

However, Moorabool Central Highlands Power Alliance chair Emily Muir said the payments didn’t go far enough to compensate farmers.

“It feels like the government’s just slapped us in the face,” she said.

About one square kilometre of the farm she lives on with her husband is likely to be impacted by the Western Renewables Link.

Ms Muir said she wasn’t against renewable energy projects but believed power lines and towers on her property would impact farming by restricting weed spraying from a helicopter, stop the movement of certain machinery or stock and interrupt views.

“I feel like it’s the Government trying to get us over the line to agree to a project that we’ve been protesting against for two and a half years,” she said.

Farmers for Climate Action said the payments were a step in the right direction but stressed any farmers who did not want transmission infrastructure on their property should have the right to refuse.

“Farmers need to be respected and rewarded for transmission on their land and this policy recognises it,” the group’s strategy director Cam Klose said.

In 2022, protests against VNI West stepped up, with hundreds of farmers driving tractors through Ballarat and a rally was held outside Parliament House in Melbourne.

The projects are part of a move to guarantee energy stability across the east coast, with power generated in Victoria and NSW able to be transmitted between states.

“These new payments acknowledge the hugely important role landholders play in hosting critical energy infrastructure – a key part of Victoria’s renewables revolution,” said Victorian energy and resources minister Lily D’Ambrosio.

Creative industries minister Steve Dimopoulos echoed those comments saying the infrastructure was vital for future energy transmission and the national market.

The Victorian Opposition backs the compensation scheme but said more attention needed to be paid to any faults and blockages affecting the transmission network.

“The real issue is getting on with delivering an energy network that can support our transitioning system,” opposition energy and resources spokesman David Hodgett said.

The Australian Energy Market Operator recently warned the reliability of the grid would be in doubt during the next decade without urgent investments to replace coal plants.

– BY RACHAEL WARD/ AAP