Politics live: new standards for datacentres being built in Australia; report warns of drone threat | Australian politics


Good morning

Krishani Dhanji

Krishani Dhanji

Good morning, Krishani Dhanji with you as the politicians gather in Canberra for another sitting week.

There is plenty on the agenda for today, the government will be under more pressure on global oil supply as the situation escalates in the Middle East.

The Liberal party will continue deal with the fallout of the South Australian election over the weekend, and European Union president Ursula von der Leyen arrives in Sydney today, before addressing the federal parliament later this week. She’ll be the first female foreign leader to do so.

And the government is introducing new rules for datacentres and AI – which will push companies building new developments to add to the clean energy supply and minimise water footprints.

I’ve got my coffee, I hope you’ve got yours – let’s get stuck in!

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Government announces new principles for data centres

The government is today announcing some ground rules for companies wanting to build data centres in Australia – including ensuring they add to clean energy supplies and minimise their water usage.

Australia has the second largest pipeline of data centre construction in the world – after the US. But data centres use huge amounts of power and water, and the government anticipates that by 2030, data centres will consume about 6% of grid supplied energy.

The new rules state that data centres will have to bring new clean energy, cover their full share of energy connection costs, lift efficiency, and support grid stability, and not increase energy costs for households and businesses.

Companies will also have to support Australian jobs and industry.

Tim Ayres is the minister in charge, and at the end of his ABC interview finally got asked about the announcement. He says the “principles” outline what the government expects from companies and investors to get data centres built in Australia.

double quotation markIt sends a message to the states and territories, we don’t want to see a race to the bottom on these standards, and it makes it very clear, if you’ve got a data centre investment for Australia, we want to see you underpin additional electricity through power purchasing agreements that mean you’re contributing to Australian resilience, not undermining it.

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