Australia’s agency short lists hydrogen projects amid spending cuts
The Australian Renewable Energy Agency (Arena) has shortlisted seven renewable hydrogen projects for the second round of the Hydrogen Headstart program, against the backdrop of spending cuts to the flagship initiative.
Arena has invited the projects to submit full applications for funding from the program, which received a revised allocation of A$1 billion in the 2026-27 (July-June) federal budget recently announced.
“Renewable hydrogen is a complex, capital-intensive industry and progress takes time, but it is a critical enabler of industrial decarbonisation, particularly for hard-to-abate sectors,” Arena CEO Darren Miller said.
“What we’re seeing are expressions of interest that are considered and well aligned to future market demand.”
The shortlisted projects include Bell Bay Powerfuels, a 300 MW project in Tasmania; South East Queensland Power-to-X Project, a 150 MW project in Queensland; and Portland Renewable Fuels Project, a 220 MW project in Victoria, according to the announcement.
The renewable hydrogen end-use for the projects are methanol, sustainable aviation fuel, ammonia, urea and alumina, according to the government agency.
Australia reprioritised funding support for clean energy in the recent budget, halving spending for Hydrogen Headstart, due to the ongoing energy crisis.
Announced in the 2023-24 budget, Hydrogen Headstart aims to catalyse Australia’s hydrogen industry to become a global leader in the emerging global trade for clean fuels, according to Arena.
Round 2 of Hydrogen Headstart builds on Arena’s support for renewable hydrogen, with the Agency having already committed over A$1.2 billion to two projects in Round 1 and over A$396 million to 68 renewable hydrogen projects since 2017 through other funding programs.
Hydrogen Headstart’s first round concluded last year, awarding A$1.2 billion to Orica’s 50 MW Hunter Valley Hydrogen Hub and to Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners’ 1,500 MW Murchison Green Hydrogen Project.
Under Hydrogen Headstart, projects seeking to produce renewable hydrogen or its derivatives can apply for a production credit delivered over 10 years to bridge the commercial gap between the cost of producing renewable hydrogen and market prices, it said.
Shortlisted applicants now have until early September to submit their full applications, it said. Following the assessment phase, a recommendation will be made to Chris Bowen, Minister for Climate Change and Energy, for approval of which projects will receive support.











