Energy and climate

Partnering with communities to enable renewable energy delivery in Australia

Macquarie Asset Management is working with Aula Energy to embed community engagement and cultural stewardship into renewable energy delivery – creating shared value for projects and communities

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SectorEnergy
Sub-sectorRenewable Energy
LocationsAustralia

Opportunity

Trust and community engagement are among the most complex challenges facing Australia's renewable energy sector.

The Australian Clean Energy Council identifies social licence as one of the most important issues facing the renewables sector, with community opposition and poorly managed engagement leading causes of project delays and uncertainty.1 The cost is material, with analysis from the Australian Energy Market Operator finding that delays and additional costs associated with low social licence results in up to $A4 billion in reduced net market benefits.2

Recognising this, Aula Energy (Aula) has developed a proactive community engagement framework as a core driver of project delivery and long-term value creation.


Approach

In 2023, Macquarie Asset Management (MAM) launched Aula to develop, build, own and operate onshore renewable energy projects across Australia.

Through board representation and active ownership, MAM collaborated with Aula's management to embed social licence and community alignment into the core of its governance and strategy - driven by a structured community engagement framework built on early, intentional and tailored engagement with local communities and Traditional Owners.

At Aula's 228 MW Boulder Creek Wind Farm (BCWF) in Queensland and 256 MW Carmody's Hill Wind Farm (CHWF) in South Australia, both currently under construction, Community Liaison Groups have been established to empower local stakeholders, ensure local voices shape project outcomes and directly influence the allocation of community-led benefit funds.

At CHWF, consistent stakeholder management over a five-year period was instrumental in securing community confidence ahead of Final Investment Decision in December 2025.

At BCWF, Cultural Heritage Investigation Management Agreements are in place with the Traditional Owners of the land, ensuring a collaborative approach to protecting and managing cultural heritage throughout construction and into operations.

Outcome

Across both projects, key community stakeholders have access to timely and transparent information, genuine opportunities to provide feedback, and direct influence over how community benefit funds are distributed.

This approach has strengthened community relationships, enabled early resolution of issues, and helped build the social licence necessary for successful project delivery.

During their construction phases, BCWF and CHWF are expected to generate up to 250 and 75 local jobs respectively. Community Benefit Funds totalling $A16 million have also been established across both projects, with 48 grants supported to date by the Community Liaison Groups who oversee the allocation of funds to ensure they are used in ways that provide the most value to local residents.

At BCWF, Darumbal People and Gangulu People, part of the Gaangalu Nation Peoples, have been engaged as Cultural Heritage Monitors and Rangers. Part of their work has involved identifying culturally and environmentally significant plants, including Gumbi Gumbi and Bottle trees, with some translocated to a native garden established by the Darumbal Peoples and other areas of the project site to ensure their continued connection to Country. As well as the Gumbi Gumbi and Bottle trees, a cycad translocation management plan is in place which has involved the collection of 804 cycad seeds, the establishment of a nursery to grow cycad plants from seeds, and the translocation of 2,828 cycad plants across the project site. The plants are marked and GPS recorded to enable ongoing monitoring throughout the project lifecycle.

collaboration, cooperation, partnership, alliance, teamwork, joint effort, synergy, collective effort, unity, group work

$A16m

in Community Benefit Funds established across BCWF and CHWF3

worker, employee, laborer, staff, team member, personnel, worker bee, workforce, service provider, worker

Up to 325 jobs  

are expected to be generated during construction phase at BCWF and CHWF4

plants, flora, vegetation, greenery, botanical, herbs, shrubs, trees, plant species, plants

2,828

cycad plants translocated and 804 cycad seeds collected across the BCWF project

Land Wind Farm, Onshore Wind Power, Onshore Wind Turbine, Terrestrial Wind Energy, Ground Wind, Inland Wind, Land-based Wind, Earth Wind, Rural Wind, Plains Wind

484 MW

of new renewable energy capacity across Boulder Creek and Carmody's Hill Wind Farms

We’re here to make a difference, working alongside communities and Traditional Owners to create shared value. Our approach goes beyond delivering energy, it’s about creating opportunities, building legacy and delivering meaningful impact through genuine collaboration.”


Chad Hymas
CEO, Aula Energy

  1. Clean Energy Council, Doing Renewables Right.
  2. AEMO, 2024 Integrated System Plan - Appendix 8: Social Licence, June 2024
  3. Total amount established across both Boulder Creek Wind Farm and Carmody's Hill Wind Farm.
  4. Total jobs across both projects with Boulder Creek Wind Farm expected to generate up to 250 jobs and Carmody's Hill Wind Farm up to 75 jobs.

 

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