Billionaire Andrew “Twiggy” Forrest has accelerated his push into Australia’s green power industry with a multibillion-dollar deal for his privately owned Squadron Energy to buy clean energy developer CWP Renewables.
Squadron, which is part of the Forrest family’s Tattarang Group, beat rival bids from Spanish utilities giant Iberdrola and Australia’s Tilt Renewables, which is partly owned by AGL. Other interested parties had also included Origin Energy and a Canadian pension fund. The deal is estimated to be worth more than $4 billion.
CWP, which was owned by private equity firm Partners Group, has 1.1 gigawatts of wind farms operating or in late-stage construction in Victoria and NSW, including Sapphire Wind Farm in NSW, which has 75 turbines generating up to 270 megawatts, Murra Warra wind farms with a combined 435 megawatts, and Crudine Ridge, which has 37 wind turbines and generates 142 megawatts. CWP has a further 5.5 gigawatts of projects in development Australia-wide, including two big battery farms.
Forrest on Wednesday said Squadron was “superbly positioned” to ensure Australia could accelerate the development of renewable energy, and create thousands of direct and indirect jobs, at the scale and pace that the economy needed.
“Squadron is proud to bring a very significant portion of Australia’s renewable energy assets home to local ownership,” Forrest said. “It means that Squadron has the renewable energy critical mass to help Australia step beyond fossil fuels.”
The takeover of CWP brings Squadron’s renewable energy portfolio to 2.5 gigawatts and its development pipeline to 20 gigawatts, the company said.
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Squadron Energy’s other projects include Queensland’s Clarke Creek wind, solar and battery farm, a stake in the Sun Cable underwater transmission line to provide solar power from Australia to Singapore, and the Port Kembla Energy Terminal, which would enable NSW for the first time to import cargoes of liquefied natural gas (LNG) and eventually transition to green hydrogen.
Partners Group head of Australia Martin Scott on Monday said it was proud to have built a major renewable energy platform that is set to play a key role in decarbonising Australia’s energy mix, and “supporting the country and its businesses in meeting their ambitious net-zero ambitions”.
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