Oven Mountain Pump Hydro Project

Scope: Develop Australian Industry Participation Plan

Industry: Renewable Energy

Project Cost: $1 billion

The Oven Mountain Pumped Hydro Energy Storage project is a $1 billion, 600 megawatt, 'off river' facility located adjacent to the Macleay River between Armidale and Kempsey, in the New England region of NSW. The construction of this major piece of renewable energy infrastructure is being overseen by Oven Mountain Pumped Storage (OMPS).

8 Initiatives for Local Industry Development

10 Initiatives for Local Employment Development

Overview

Under the NSW Electricity Infrastructure Investment Act 2020 No. 44, all renewable energy projects are required to develop an Industry and Aboriginal Participation Plan (IAPP). The development of the IAPP must consider the requirements of the project’s Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) and other key economic impacts on both the project and the regional community.

In August 2022, OMPS engaged Hughes et al (HEA) to collaborate in the development of their projects’ IAPP. In mapping out the plan structure, HEA considered the role the IAPP would play as a central document. This consideration saw the objective of the IAPP evolve from a compliance led document to a market engagement plan that would support project design, constructability, and resourcing considerations.

HEA developed the IAPP to align with Australian Industry Participation Plan (AIP Plan) requirements, and the core elements of industry participation focused on opportunities for the use of Australian steel, the development of manufacturing capabilities, and the unbundling and identification of opportunities for the local supply chain.

The HEA team utilised information gathered from our previous market analysis for the OMPS project, in partnership with Industry Capability Network (ICN) NSW, to further validate and inform the IAPP development.

The IAPP was also designed to differentiate between the development and engagement of supply chain capability through procurement practice, and the engagement of workforce capacity through human resources practice, to serve as both a supply chain and employment “deliverability” strategy document. To that end, HEA detailed action plans in the appendices, that outlined specific strategies and a corresponding range of initiatives to be undertaken to achieve the strategy objectives.

A key element of the IAPP is Aboriginal participation, with the OMPS team working with Traditional Owner groups and other key Aboriginal Leaders to ensure adequate opportunities were provided to Aboriginal peoples and businesses. This commitment was recognised in a dedicated OMPS Aboriginal Participation Plan (APP) which expanded on key strategies listed in the IAPP.