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Powering the Pacific and Timor-Leste with three new Off-Grid Renewable Energy Partnerships

Powering the Pacific and Timor-Leste with three new Off-Grid Renewable Energy Partnerships

Stakeholders from MEA Power Up and Engineers without Borders, organisations selected as part of the business partnerships.

The Australian Government has announced three new business partnerships to deliver off-grid renewable energy to remote and rural communities in Papua New Guinea, Timor-Leste, and Vanuatu. 

The Off-Grid Renewable Energy Partnerships are part of the Australian Government’s Pacific Climate Infrastructure Financing Partnership (PCIFP) initiative to expand the Australian Infrastructure Financing Facility for the Pacific’s (AIFFP) climate investments. 

It does this by partnering with businesses to deliver reliable and sustainable renewable energy to remote and rural communities in the Pacific and Timor-Leste, implemented by the Business Partnerships Platform (BPP) - Australia’s flagship program for collaboration with businesses to tackle development challenges.

Under the new business partnerships Papua New Guinea will see improved energy infrastructure at New Ireland’s Lemakot Health Facility and the Raihu Rural Hospital in Aitape through a partnership with Caritas Australia, Catholic Church Health Services, and the Australian Government, enhancing energy accessibility and reliability for essential healthcare services.

Timor-Leste will benefit from clean solar energy to enhance critical health infrastructure at four sites in Cova-Lima Province. MEA Power Up and Master Electricians Australia, together with the Australian Government, will ensure medical clinics and water pumping sites receive reliable energy.

Vanuatu will tackle the growing issue of solar e-waste through a circular economy project. The University of New South Wales, Vanuatu Disability Promotion Advocacy Association, Vanuatu Institute of Technology, and the Vanuatu Department of Energy, in partnership with the Australian Government, will manage and reduce e-waste from solar energy systems.

These partnerships demonstrate the Australian Government’s commitment to investing in sustainable infrastructure and addressing climate change impacts across the region. With a total investment of AUD$5.8 million, including AUD$3.6 million in funding from the Australian Government, these initiatives are set to significantly impact local communities.

The AIFFP through PCIFP will launch a new AUD$75 million long-term off-grid renewable energy program later this year, further enhancing the region’s capacity to mitigate, adapt, and build resilience against climate change.

This announcement brings the total investment under the Off-Grid Renewable Energy Partnerships program to AUD$5.8 million in 13 partnerships across six countries.

These partnerships were selected through the Australian Infrastructure Financing Facility for the Pacific (AIFFP) Call for Partnerships to Support Off-Grid Renewable Energy in the Pacific and Timor-Leste.