Since its beginning, ActewAGL has continued to undertake several innovative programs to help the environment. They include the following. • Greenchoice – This is a program that lets residential and business customers support environmentally friendly green energy by paying a premium on their electricity bill (either fixed or percentage based plans). The additional payment is invested in renewable energy generation from sources like
mini hydro, wind power and
biomass. The Greenchoice program is independently assessed by the Australian government's National Green Power Accreditation Program to guarantee that the green energy produced by ActewAGL comes from government-approved renewable energy sources. • ActewAGL hydro – While most
hydro-electric developments require the building of dams and lakes, ActewAGL's mini-hydro uses an existing water supply to provide electricity that would otherwise come from fossil-fuel power stations. •
Solar farm – In early 2008 ActewAGL worked with the ACT Government to study the feasibility of developing a solar farm in the ACT. The study investigated the environmental impact, economic viability, and educational benefits of such a facility. In May 2009 the ACT Government called for expressions of interest to construct, own and operate a solar power facility in the ACT. The government specified the facility must be capable of delivering power to at least 10,000 Canberra homes. ActewAGL responded to this request and in December 2009 were advised that they had been shortlisted to move through to the next stage of the selection process. • Canberra will be the first Australian city to pilot a publicly-available
Hydrogen Refuelling Station (HRS) with ActewAGL commencing the construction of the station in early 2020. The construction of the station and provision of vehicles are the result of a partnership between the ACT Government, ActewAGL and renewable energy developer
Neoen. COVID-19 has caused delays in commissioning of the station. The 20
Hyundai Nexo hatchbacks which have been added to the ACT Government fleet, making up Australia's largest fleet of hydrogen-powered cars, have arrived in Canberra and await the opening of the station. • ActewAGL is pioneering a world-first electric vehicle (EV)
vehicle-to-grid (V2G) trial with $2.4 million in funding from the
Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA). As batteries on wheels, V2G technology allows EVs to discharge electricity back to the grid or even provide services to improve grid security. The Realising Electric Vehicle-to-Grid Services (REVS) project will see 51
Nissan LEAF EVs deployed across the ACT to test and provide V2G services. The REVS project is a whole of industry collaboration including the
ACT Government (fleet owner),
Australian National University (research), Evoenergy (electricity network owner), JET Charge (charging infrastructure),
Nissan (vehicle manufacturer) and SG Fleet (fleet manager), all who have collectively supported the project contributing a further $3.86m.
Accenture is supporting the REVS project with project management services and insights on the global EV landscape. The REVS project ran until February 2022. • ActewAGL has research partnerships with the
Australian National University,
Deakin University and the
Canberra Institute of Technology in areas of innovation including renewable hydrogen, energy efficiency and electric vehicles. In 2020 Dr Lee White of ANU's School of Regulation and Global Governance (RegNet) was named winner of the Icon Water and ActewAGL Perpetual Endowment Fund and will spend 12 months collaborating with ActewAGL to determine the impact of housing energy efficiency on bill changes, driven by time-of-use rates. == Evoenergy ==