‘Extreme’ risk of yet more cost, construction blowouts at Snowy 2.0
The national auditor says the largest renewable energy project in the country is hampered by governance and management failures.
The $12 billion Snowy 2.0 scheme will cop further cost and timeline blowouts, auditors say, but the project is beset with management failures and the government-owned corporation delivering the project cannot yet say how much more it will cost and how much longer it will take.
The findings of likely billion-dollar blowouts to the largest renewable energy development in the country are a significant challenge for the federal government, which is under pressure from One Nation and the Opposition over the cost of its ambitious emissions reduction goals.
The Australian National Audit Office issued a long list of failings by the government-owned corporation and recommended Snowy publish regular updates on its progress on the pumped hydro project.
Snowy Hydro only “partly agreed” with this finding despite Energy Minister Chris Bowen previously declaring the government was committed to transparent reporting of project progress.
However, Snowy Hydro told the auditor that there was an “extreme” risks to the project’s cost as well as further complications on its geotechnical tunnelling work and construction productivity.
Snowy 2.0’s cost has already blown out from an initial $2 billion estimate to more than $12 billion.
The auditors found that Snowy’s management “does not have a robust understanding of the cost to complete the project”, had failed to developed adequate governance to control blowouts, was overly reliant on inadequate cost forecasting systems of its contractors and significantly underestimated costs of a wage deal with the workforce.
Despite the complexity of the project and cost risks associated with huge underground excavations, the auditor said Snowy did not conduct quality control audits on work of its construction contractor, Italian company Webuild, between mid-2023 to November 2024.
This masthead published last month videos of water gushing through a tunnel and cavern that revealed the obstacles the multibillion-dollar project was encountering beneath the Kosciuszko National Park, and away from the public’s eye.
A source familiar with the project said the high-pressure torrent of water should not have been a surprise given contractors pressed ahead with drilling in an area they were advised was likely to tap into significant volumes of groundwater.
Energy Minister Chris Bowen said the project was important and “must be done right”.
“It’s good that Snowy Hydro has agreed to implement the ANAO’s sensible recommendations – the Snowy Board has a a responsibility to uphold the highest standards,” Bowen said.
“Once completed, Snowy 2.0
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