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Datacentre in Sydney. New AI rules leave communities already facing
Datacentre development proposals with a level of uncertainty. Photograph: Hollie Adams/Reuters View image in fullscreen A
Datacentre in Sydney. New AI rules leave communities already facing
Datacentre development proposals with a level of uncertainty. Photograph: Hollie Adams/Reuters Albanese’s AI blueprint sparks calls for
Datacentre moratorium until new regulations in place Prime minister’s plan will create
Energy Regulations for datacentres in
Australia Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast Environmental and community groups have called for a pause on
Datacentre development until new regulations are in place after
Anthony Albanese promised “greater clarity and speed” over their approval. In his landmark speech on
Artificial Intelligence at the
University of Sydney on Wednesday, the prime minister said
Australia would create a legal obligation for large-scale datacentres to underwrite new power supply, pay their full share of grid connection, and add as much energy to the grid as they take out of it. The prime minister noted all three obligations “take in every level of government and their overlapping powers” but said the national standards would ensure governments were on the same page.
Deanna D’Alessandro, professor and director of the
Net Zero Institute at the
University of Sydney, said up until now the approach to
Datacentre regulation has been fragmented. “The commonwealth is focused on sovereign digital capability, productivity, critical infrastructure resilience and decarbonisation,” she said. “States are balancing economic growth with energy, water and regional development challenges. Local councils are dealing with the immediate impacts on land use, housing, traffic, amenity and community expectations.” The challenge, she said, is coordinating priorities to ensure economic benefits are captured while social licence is maintained. All state and territory ministers at energy and climate change ministerial council meetings are required to agree to the new standards before their adoption. Although the majority of datacentres in
Australia are in
New South Wales and
Victoria, at the May meeting
Queensland was the single holdout on the proposal. The
Climate Council has warned
Queensland’s reluctance could lead to a “state-by-state race to the bottom” on
Datacentre expansion. “The AI-driven surge in datacentres will have a profound effect on our energy system, and unchecked, this growth could mean soaring prices and rampant climate pollution,” the
Climate Council chief, Amanda McKenzie, said. “The government must adequately regulate
Datacentre growth to ensure it occurs in the best interests of Australians.” The peak organisation for the sector, Data Centres
Australia, has previously pushed back against suggestions operators should be 100% renewables powered. The chief executive, Belinda Dennett, told a NSW inquiry in May there was a desire to get to 100%, but that trying “to match a renewable energy project timing and a
Datacentre timing is difficult”. On Wednesday, Dennett said the devil will be in the detail, but largely agreed with the prime minister’s position. The new rules leave communities already facing
Datacentre development proposals with a level of uncertainty. Five datacentres are planned for the northern Sydney suburb of Lane Cove and would take up 40% of its industrial land, the Lane Cove Responsible Planning Group has warned. Earlier this month, it joined other community groups in calling for a moratorium on new
Datacentre development until stronger protections are in place. The group’s Sasha Titchkosky told Guardian
Australia she welcomed the prime minister’s speech as a recognition of the need for national regulation and supports a national body to assess the power, water and infrastructure needs of the “highly extractive” industry. But the announcement made a moratorium on current proposals even more necessary, she said. “There shouldn’t be any new approvals given until this regulatory framework is established,” she said. This week, the New York governor, Kathy Hochul, announced a one-year moratorium on hyperscale
Datacentre approvals in the US state. The Greens communications spokesperson, Sarah Hanson Young, said
Australia should have a similar moratorium on large
Datacentre development until the right rules are in place on energy, water use and environmental and community impact. “Today’s announcement … is welcome, but with more than 90 datacentres already in the pipeline we cannot allow a free-for-all in the meantime,” she said. Explore more on these topics Datacentres
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