Subscribe to Newsletter
  • ACQUIRE
  • JAPAN ENERGY SUMMIT

logo

  • Energy
  • Construction
  • Resources
  • Trending
  • Business Insight
  • Events
  • Magazine
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Home
  • Home
  • Energy
  • Construction
  • Resources
  • Trending
  • Business Insight
  • Events
  • Magazine
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Farmers growing Australia’s food look to cheaper power as costs bite

19 Sep, 2022
transmission



Adelaide will host the 2022 Irrigation Australia International Conference and Exhibition this October and for the first time will include a Renewable Energy Workshop as interest in renewables explodes amid soaring electricity prices.

Irrigated agriculture plays a critical role in feeding the nation, but its ongoing sustainability and competitiveness relies on reliable, cheap, low emission electricity and diesel for the pumping of water.

According to the National Irrigator’s Council, 93 percent of fruit, nuts and grapes, 83 percent of vegetables, 48 percent of dairy products and 100 percent of rice is produced by irrigated agriculture.

The Renewable Energy Workshop on October 6 will bring together farmers and industry experts to discuss the uptake of solar, batteries, microgrids and agrivoltaics (the combining of solar and farming) in the sector and how emissions and power costs can be cut.

A session on future tech will see Neil Thompson, Associate Professor at Queensland University of Technology, talk through the hydrogen economy and how farmers could be well placed to take advantage of these new technologies.

Mr Thompson says “Recent increases in gas prices on the East Coast of Australia have seen deteriorating margins in the ag sector.

“At the same time, volatility in diesel pricing has seen similar pressure on farms using diesel for vehicles and irrigation pumps.

“Accordingly, green hydrogen made from spare renewable energy and wastewater potentially offers some hope.”

James Stacey, an irrigator in South Australia who grows grains, oaten hay and livestock, has been using solar to reduce his pumping costs.

He had expensive power bills of $5K or $6K a month before installing solar. His power bills have now substantially reduced, with the payback in about three years.

Mr Stacey says “We’re able to export to the grid so that helps generate a small income during the winter months when we don’t irrigate much.

“The rough pay back for our solar, was about three years so it stacks up economically for our business.

It has changed the way we irrigate too as we used to only irrigate in off-peak times, but now we can irrigate when it’s best for the crops and for us.”

Anne Dansey from AgVic will be speaking about the combining of solar and farming on the same parcel of land.

AgVic have installed a number of solar panels above a pear orchard to test the impact on the trees, with early results indicating reduced fruit damage by sunburn and improved water use efficiency

Related Articles

Connecting Green Hydrogen MENA 2024

International Energy Week – In search of the energy transition

Smart Energy 2023

Connecting Renewable Energy Conference

Comments

Leave a comment Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Breaking

  • Energy
  • Construction
  • Resources
20 May

Snowy 2.0 workers strike over pay disparity

16 May

Long-duration batteries key to renewable reliability

16 May

Rural not-for-profits drive clean energy in regional Australia

13 May

NSW unveils 10 Central-West Orana renewables projects

13 May

Australia’s grid hits record 43 per cent renewables in 2025

13 May

ResiLoop drives Melbourne flooring waste recycling revolution

13 May

Melbourne housing growth exposes environmental crisis

08 May

NABERS SPI 2025 launches milestone

29 Apr

Salta achieves first 5-Star Green Star industrial milestone

28 Apr

GCCA launches world’s first low carbon ratings system

13 May

Queensland resources sector drives energy transition

08 May

Global energy mix shifts slowly toward fuel alternatives

08 May

Clean energy mineral rush fuels rights abuses

29 Apr

Mitsui invests $1b in US low-carbon ammonia project

24 Apr

Collie’s industrial transformation accelerates with major project milestones

  • BATTERY ASSET MANAGEMENT SUMMIT

Online Magazine

    Current Cover
  • Login
  • Subscribe

Subscribe

Subscribe to Newsletter

Our Titles

  • Share on Newsletter
  • Share on LinkedIn
  • Share on Twitter
  • Home
  • Contact Us
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy
© Sage Media Group 2025 All Rights Reserved.
×
Authorization
  • Registration
 This feature has been disabled
 This feature has been disabled until further notice, however you may still register
×
Registration
  • Autorization
Register
* All fields required