Search

Solar

Monday
10 Oct 2022

Australian Tech Billionaire to Chair $20 Billion Solar Power Export Project

10 Oct 2022  by reuters.com   
Australian software mogul Mike Cannon-Brookes was named chairman last Friday of clean energy start-up Sun Cable, which is seeking to secure funds for a proposed A$30 billion-plus ($19.3 billion-plus) solar power export project.


Annie Cannon-Brookes and Mike Cannon-Brookes, chief executive officer of Atlassian, attend the annual Allen and Co. Sun Valley media conference in Sun Valley, Idaho, U.S., July 11, 2019. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

Singapore-based Sun Cable plans to supply solar power from Australia to Singapore and eventually Indonesia through the world's longest subsea high voltage cable, linked to a 17-20 gigawatt solar farm, as well as an energy storage facility of up to 42 GWh in Australia's Northern Territory.

Cannon-Brookes, co-founder of project management software maker Atlassian (TEAM.O) and an investor in Sun Cable since 2019, said he was "thrilled" to take up the role at the company, which is yet to break ground on the planned 4,200-km (2,600-mile) undersea cable.

"Australia can and should be a global leader in clean energy exports. Sun Cable is at the forefront of making Australia a renewable energy superpower," Cannon-Brookes said in a statement.

Sun Cable Chief Executive David Griffin pointed to Cannon-Brookes' experience in "rapidly building business to a global scale."

The project, also backed by iron ore magnate and Fortescue Metals (FMG.AX) founder Andrew Forrest, received an "investment ready" tick in June from Infrastructure Australia, an independent body tasked with evaluating infrastructure projects.

Construction is planned to start in 2024 with full operations commencing in 2029.

Capital raising for the project is underway after Sun Cable appointed Macquarie Capital, Moelis & Co and MA Financial Group as financial advisers in July, with the target of wrapping up in early 2024.

Cannon-Brookes' environmental activism is making waves in corporate Australia, most recently through his attempt earlier this year to buy AGL (AGL.AX), Australia's largest electricity generator, and accelerate the closure of AGL's coal-fired power plants by a decade.

($1 = 1.5567 Australian dollars)

Keywords

More News

Loading……