Eraring power station to stay open until 2027

"The NSW Government has shown enough leniency to coal companies and this huge taxpayer handout for Eraring will prolong the ill effects of coal ash waste dumping and toxic stack emissions impacting community health, the lake ecosystem and our climate," - Jo Lynch, HCEC

It is not a good policy to throw more public money at the fossil fuel industry. Let's give our community, workers and the environment a better chance for the future. Let's clean up the exposed ash dams and focus on investment in renewable energy". - Lyn Fraser, Coal-ash Community Alliance

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2023

In 2013, Origin Energy acquired the Eraring power station during the controversial privatization of NSW electricity generation assets.

In 2023, speculation arose that a NSW Government funded life extension may be granted to Origin Energy to keep Eraring running beyond 2025.

What does the extension of Eraring mean for the Hunter community?

Prolong adverse environmental & community health impacts from toxic air & water pollution

Slow climate action by undermining NSW legislated carbon reduction targets

When Origin announced in 2022 that it would retire Eraring early in 2025, it was estimated that this would save almost 90 million tonnes of carbon pollution.

In November 2023, the NSW Government passed the the Climate Change (Net Zero Future) Bill which legislated 70% emissions reduction by 2035.

NSW is currently predicted to fall short of these targets, and the extension of Eraring means that will lock in taxpayer funded climate pollution from NSW largest coal generator.

Energy experts say that a delay to the closure of Eraring also has potential to scare off or slow investment in renewable projects in the Hunter.

Waste yet more public money propping up expensive coal power

It is speculated that Origin Energy could receive a 2-4 year, $150m annual subsidy to continue polluting the climate and environment, whilst charging the public big bucks on our energy bills.

Energy analysts and experts assert that the extension of Eraring beyond 2025 to meet energy security needs is not necessary, and that an equivalent investment into the rapid deployment of renewable energy projects would avoid the potential energy short fall used to justify propping up coal with public money.

  1. More coal subsidies to extend Eraring? Heads, Origin wins; Tails, taxpayers lose, Climate Energy Finance

  2. Lights Will Stay On: Australia’s Biggest Coal Power Station Can Be Closed In 2025 – Here’s How by Climate Energy Finance

  3. Unreliable and Expensive: Eraring Can Be Closed On Time To Save Consumers Money by Nexa Advisory

Residents of Lake Macquarie and the Central Coast living with the daily pollution burden of coal power are against the extension of Eraring due these impacts on their own health, the degradation of the Lake Macquarie estuary’s ecosystem and the climate.

Local groups including the Coal-ash Community Alliance have been campaigning against the excessive pollution impacts of coal power and calling for the removal and safe recycling of coal-ash waste into a range of sustainable products, including lightweight aggregates which could significantly reduce the carbon emissions from the cement sector.

In Victoria’s coal power region, a plant to extract critical minerals from ash waste has been announced. Unfortunately for the lake, after Origin acquired Eraring in 2015, a fully-fledged proposal to reuse 100% of its coal-ash waste was shelved, diverting more heavy metal pollution into the estuary.

In 2019, the HCEC’s Out of the Ashes report put a spotlight on coal-ash waste contamination in the Lake Macquarie estuary.