Skip to content
Energy, Union

ETU exposes safety breaches on biggest transmission project

Electrical Trades Union 2 mins read

SafeWork NSW is on the ground inspecting the worksites of Australia’s largest renewable energy transmission project, after the Electrical Trades Union uncovered major safety breaches.

An inspection blitz by the ETU last week exposed dangerous workplace practices and conditions on the sites of Project EnergyConnect, a massive transmission line connecting power grids in South Australia, NSW and Victoria.

 

Those breaches include the use of non-compliant harnesses and first aid kits, poor food, water and sun safety, unqualified workers conducting electrical work, and no toilets. 

 

Unreliable mobile-radio communications and inadequate first-aid procedures also recently kept a worker who was suffering a stroke waiting 90 minutes for an ambulance to arrive.

 

“Elecnor is a repeat and reckless offender when it comes to workplace safety on Project EnergyConnect,” ETU national secretary Michael Wright said. “The fact that the workplace health and safety regulator has boots on the ground to investigate should be ringing alarm bells to Elecnor and Transgrid.

 

“Building Australia’s largest renewable energy transmission line should be a source of pride, but instead it seems to inspire greed, risking the safety of hundreds of workers.

 

“Apart from being provided some hi-vis clothing and a vehicle, workers have largely been left to fend for themselves on the lines. Workers have been dodging falling objects, and wearing fraying and non-compliant harnesses. When something goes wrong, they’ve waited an eternity for help.

 

“Our members have been denied basic rights, crammed in crib sheds, and are lucky to score a toilet on site. This cannot be what the energy transition looks like.”

 

As the federal government plans to underwrite an extra 32GW of renewable power to drive more investment, while spending $20 billion to modernise the electricity grid as part of the energy transition, the ETU said it was incumbent upon national leaders and developers to protect workers and raise standards.

 

“This project has had a horror track record for the rights of workers - safety has been back of mind, wages have been suppressed and corners have been cut. Exploitation and unsafe working conditions are making it that much harder to attract the workforce we need to transition the nation to net zero,” Mr Wright said.

 

“Australia needs Project EnergyConnect to secure Australia’s electricity network yet clearly Elecnor and Transgrid don’t care about the security of workers who are building it.

 

“The ETU is doing everything it can to make sure this essential national project is built safely and to high quality. We are getting the job done to stablise the national grid, but we won’t allow it to come at the cost of workers’ lives and livelihoods."

 

Media contact: Sofie Wainwright 0403 920 301 

More from this category

  • Government TAS, Union
  • 23/10/2024
  • 14:44
Rail, Tram and Bus Union

LAUNCESTON BUS DRIVERS TO STOP WORK FOR ONE HOUR TOMORROW

Bus drivers will step up their industrial actions on the Metro Tasmania network from tomorrow, with a one-hour work stoppage to affect services in Launceston TOMORROW (Thursday 24 October). Rail, Tram and Bus Union (RTBU) Tasmania Secretary Byron Cubit said Launceston bus drivers would stop work for one hour between 1.03pm and 2.03pm, bringing lunch time services to a halt. “Bus drivers are frustrated with the offer from Metro that’s on the table, which is effectively an 18-month pay freeze before the next pay rise kicks in,” Mr Cubit said. “It is disappointing that drivers feel they need to escalate…

  • Energy, Information Technology
  • 23/10/2024
  • 11:55
By Joe Craparotta, Vice President, Cloud & Service Providers, Pacific Zone at Schneider Electric

AI driving data centres to the edge

In the past year, artificial intelligence (AI) has surged forward like a digital renaissance, echoing the rapid and transformative rise of the Internet in…

  • Contains:
  • Energy, Regional Country Services
  • 23/10/2024
  • 10:33
Manilla Solar

Residents living within 100 miles of community-owned Manilla Solar project invited to invest

October 23, 2024 New England and North West residents are being invited to invest in the 4.6 MW community owned solar and battery storage project Manilla Solar, with expression of interest opening and community engagement roadshow events across the region to be held this week. Communities living within 100 miles of the project and national investors who see the value in the project are being invited to invest. The Manilla Solar project was first conceived in 2012 and in 2023 successfully raised $435,000 from 82 investors to acquire the project. The aim is to attract investors who live within 100…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.