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Big solar farms winners of wind ban: Hunt

Tlou has paid a penalty for claiming it could generate certain amounts of solar power.

Tlou has paid a penalty for claiming it could generate certain amounts of solar power. Photo: AAP

Large solar energy farms will get a windfall from a new direction for the nation’s green bank, the federal government believes.

The Coalition has defended banning Clean Energy Finance Corporation funding for wind farms and roof-top solar projects, saying the $10 billion body should focus on emerging technologies.

Wind and rooftop solar are mature and don’t need taxpayer-funded borrowings, the government says.

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Environment Minister Greg Hunt believes large-scale solar will win from the directive, which was part of a deal with crossbench senators to slash the renewable energy target.

“I love large-scale solar,” he told reporters in Melbourne on Monday as he tried to flip the focus back on the Opposition Leader.

“Bill Shorten, why are you against large-scale solar?”

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Environment Minister Greg Hunt.

Labor believes the government is setting up the corporation for collapse, after twice failing to abolish it in the parliament.

Opposition environment spokesman Mark Butler said the CEFC was set up to support the lending market and encourage private banks to invest in clean energy.

“What we see now is Tony Abbott trying to nobble this corporation for his own ideological purposes,” Mr Butler said.

Supporting emerging technologies was the role of another government-funded body, the Australian Renewable Energy Agency, Mr Butler said.

The CEFC directive comes after a government deal to slash the nation’s 2020 renewable energy target from 41,000 gigawatt hours to 33,000.

Prime Minister Tony Abbott last month labelled wind turbines ugly and noisy while boasting he’d been able to reduce their number as much as the parliament would allow.

On Monday, he restated his commitment to abolishing the CEFC.

In the meantime the body should fund “things that might not otherwise get finance”.

“As long as it exists it might as well be as useful as possible,” he told reporters near Goulburn.

The government believes the green lender – which in 2014 achieved 4.15 per cent return on investment – doesn’t encourage additional renewables, instead displacing one form for another.

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Tony Abbott says he wants to abolish the clean energy fund.

The Australian Greens accused the government of hurting lower-income earners and rejected claims large-scale solar projects would benefit because the RET was cut too deeply.

Deputy Greens leader Larissa Waters says the ban will discontinue CEFC support for solar companies who offer free installation of solar panels for retirees and low-income families.

It also reinforced the government’s message that renewable investments weren’t welcome in Australia, she said.

Mr Hunt said it would not disadvantage Australians wanting to install rooftop solar.

Mr Butler said it’s “nigh on impossible” for the CEFC to achieve its mandate, with reduced investment opportunities compounding an earlier government directive to increase its returns.

Clean Energy Council chief executive Kane Thornton conceded wind and rooftop solar technologies were well developed, but said niche areas could still benefit from CEFC funding.

He agreed with Labor the ban made the CEFC’s job “all the more difficult”.

The Electrical Trade Union slammed the “damaging and bizarre decision”.

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