More than 60 per cent of growers who attended last week’s town hall meeting in Ayr have signed up—either on the spot or within 48 hours—to supply cane waste to SKY Renewables, according to company CEO Simon Yim.
The event, held at the Ayr Showground Hall on Wednesday 7 May, outlined SKY’s plan to convert sugarcane tops and trash into renewable natural gas (Bio-LNG) for export to energy-hungry markets like Singapore, which relies on liquefied natural gas for 95 per cent of its electricity.
SKY Renewables, founded by Yim, has been working with Burdekin canegrowers since 2018 and is positioning itself as a global first mover in producing renewable gas from sugarcane waste. The proposed value chain would pay growers around $15 per green tonne for the waste, with SKY covering all additional harvesting and logistics costs.
“Renewable natural gas is the only recognised way to reduce the carbon emissions intensity of LNG-fired power generation in Singapore,” Yim said. “Singapore industries face the highest carbon tax in Asia and renewable gas is vital for the nation, which has Asia’s highest GDP per capita.”
The meeting featured a panel including Yim, Canegrowers Burdekin Chair Owen Menkens, QCAR Chair Christian Lago, grower Ricky Mio, and former QSL CEO Greg Beashel.
Led by Yim, the meeting outlined SKY’s plan to carry out its vision. The final hour of the meeting saw the panel field questions from the crowd predominantly made up of local farmers.
SKY is now planning shed meetings and mini town halls across the district from 22 May through to the end of the month. Two larger events are confirmed for Inkerman Hall—1:30 pm on 26 May and 6:30 pm on 28 May.
“I would encourage growers to check in with their friends and neighbours so nobody gets left behind before the 31 May deadline,” Yim said.
SKY Renewables, founded by Simon Yim, has been working with Burdekin Canegrowers since 2018. Photo credit: Jacob Casha