Senate debates

Thursday, 12 October 2006

Questions without Notice

Climate Change

2:10 pm

Photo of Ian CampbellIan Campbell (WA, Liberal Party, Minister for the Environment and Heritage) Share this | Hansard source

I welcome Senator Webber’s question, because she draws attention to a program that has and will roll out solar cells onto the roofs of both private homes and schools across this country. We are on target to achieve about 12,000. In the budget before the last one, this government extended that program because it is such a good program. It is a way of building what I call a bridge into the Solar Cities program.

We have increased the expenditure on the rollout of solar powering of communities through the Solar Cities program. For example, the Photovoltaic Rebate Program—or the solar roofs program, as I like to call it because people know what it is when you call it that—will have an expenditure of roughly $20-odd million. The Solar Cities program is nearly quadruple that; it is about $75 million. This is a massive ramping up of investment in the deployment of solar cells to create energy for households and also for schools.

In the last budget, I took a program that was terminating and extended it for a further two years. Labor went around saying that we had halved the rebates. The rebates have ensured that the number of homes that get solar energy cells put on roofs as a result of the extension of the program that I got through the budget last year will double. When we evaluated the program we found that we would get an even better uptake and rollout of solar technology with a lower grant. So yes, the grant is lower per house, but the number of houses that are getting the solar cells is doubling because the program is so well subscribed. So we are getting twice the number of solar cells for the same money.

I welcome the campaign by the Sunrise program. I welcome the fact that it is drawing attention to what people can do in their own homes to reduce their footprint. I am a great supporter of the program, and I am looking at how we can spread solar energy across the country. We have got the Solar Cities program. Thousands upon thousands of new homes will benefit in places like Adelaide and Townsville, where we have already committed to rolling out the Solar Cities program, and, over the next few weeks, I will announce at least two and possibly three more solar cities, which will see a massive expansion of solar energy being provided into homes across Australia.

In relation to PVRP, I am very keen to see a program to succeed PVRP that does what we did last time. I have extended it once already as environment minister. I am very keen to extend it again, but I am absolutely certainly we can improve it more. One of the problems at the moment is that it goes generally to very wealthy people. It cuts out middle Australia and it is virtually unaffordable for low-income Australians. I have said to the renewable energy industry that, when a replacement for the PVRP scheme is negotiated and worked on, which I am working on at the moment, we want to make sure that people on lower and middle incomes can get it because, quite frankly, at the moment the people who generally get it are very, very high income earners, and I would like to see low- and middle-income earners be able to shift their homes and schools across to solar power.

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