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$27m Clean Energy Centre of Excellence to be established in Burnie with state and federal cash

The green energy workforce of the future will be shown the ropes at a much-vaunted new $27m training hub to be jointly funded by the state and federal governments.

Mackintosh power station. A new centre of excellence will train Tasmania’s renewable energy workers of the future to build wind, solar, and hydro power infrastructure. Picture: Hydro Tasmania
Mackintosh power station. A new centre of excellence will train Tasmania’s renewable energy workers of the future to build wind, solar, and hydro power infrastructure. Picture: Hydro Tasmania

A new $27m Clean Energy Centre of Excellence will be established in Burnie, where workers of the future will be trained to help expedite the nation’s transition to net zero emissions.

Jointly funded by the state and federal governments, the centre will be based at the TasTAFE Burnie campus.

Federal Skills and Training Minister Andrew Giles said the centre of excellence would “give students the critical skills to work on the renewable technologies Australia will need to successfully reach our goals”.

Minister for Skills and Training of Australia, Andrew Giles during Question Time at Parliament House in Canberra. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman
Minister for Skills and Training of Australia, Andrew Giles during Question Time at Parliament House in Canberra. Picture: NewsWire / Martin Ollman

“This Centre of Excellence will provide students with practical experience, which we know is such an important element of training and means graduates will be ready to join the workforce right away,” he said.

“Partnerships like this one, between governments, training organisations and industry, are the best way to deliver the skills people need for good, secure work and careers.”

The Australian government has set a legislated target of reaching net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.

As part of this push, the new centre of excellence will see students learn about the design, construction, and maintenance of renewable energy infrastructure.

Key features of the centre include a pilot STEM careers hub, strategies to boost training rates and access, and the redevelopment of an energy trades facility at TasTAFE’s Burnie campus.

Tasmanian Skills and Training Minister Felix Ellis said the state government had an “ambitious renewable energy agenda” and wanted to “ensure we have the workforce to match”.

Minister Felix Ellis. Picture: Nikki Davis-Jones
Minister Felix Ellis. Picture: Nikki Davis-Jones

“It’s so important that we open as many doors as we can to get more young Tasmanians on the tools and skilled-up in their chosen field, particularly in our regions,” he said.

“We know that by investing in skills and training, we’re showing the next generation of young Tasmanians that you don’t need to go to university to have great opportunities in life.”

Industry experts and academics from other TAFEs and universities will work with the new centre on the design and delivery of training, with students to be provided with opportunities to participate in groundbreaking research.

The centre will form partnerships with the renewable energy industry, Jobs and Skills Councils, universities, employers, and unions.

Tasmania’s own Climate Change Action Plan has a target of net zero emissions or lower from 2030 and a doubling of the state’s renewable energy production by 2040.

According to the landmark Paris Agreement, worldwide emissions need to be cut by 45 per cent by 2030 and net zero needs to be reached by 2050 in order to keep global warming to no more than 1.5 degrees, which would reduce some of the deadliest impacts of climate change.

robert.inglis@news.com.au

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Original URL: https://www.themercury.com.au/news/politics/27m-clean-energy-centre-of-excellence-to-be-established-in-burnie-with-state-and-federal-cash/news-story/7a28e5c6c2c6819387aa58fe27bc08d7