Guest blog: Ethics in the Energy Transition

The Energy Charter is a proud member of The Ethics Alliance, run by The Ethics Centre. In this guest blog, Ethics Alliance director Cris Parker tackles ethics in the energy transition.

We’re in This Together: The Ethics of Cooperation in Climate Action and Rural Industry 

We’re in this together” is easy to say, but much harder to do – especially when people’s livelihoods, land, and the planet’s future are at stake. 

Australia is committed to reducing emissions and shifting to renewable energy. However, for many rural and regional communities – particularly those tied to coal, gas, or agriculture, they sit at the crossroads of opportunity and uncertainty. These areas are rich in culture, industry, and community and are also heavily shaped by commercial imperatives – the need for jobs, services, and sustainable growth. 

Unfortunately, climate action can feel more like an impending threat than a shared opportunity. These communities often experience change as something done to them, rather than with them. 

Bridging this gap demands more than just policy and technology. Climate change is one of the biggest challenges of our time, but tackling it isn’t just about switching to solar panels or building wind farms either. It’s about ethical cooperation – a commitment to fairness, transparency, and shared responsibility in how we plan and implement climate solutions. If not done ethically, commercial development can disrupt local culture, raise living costs, and put pressure on fragile ecosystems 

At its heart, cooperation is about shared goals. But in climate policy, those goals don’t always look the same to everyone. For city campaigners, a ‘just transition’ means phasing out coal and gas. For a local worker in Gladstone or the Hunter Valley, it might sound like job losses without a safety-net. 

Different philosophical perspectives can help us to understand how we can apply ethical cooperation as we pursue our shared goals. Whether it’s about consequences, duties and obligations, or people’s rights, all are underpinned with the values and principles of transparency, fairness, and mutual respect and dignity. 

‘Just transition’ sounds good, but what does it mean in practice? As researchers Marshall and Pearce put it: “Many people in regional communities have no concrete understanding as to what a ‘just transition’ refers to and do not find it to be authentically their syntax”. 

The proposed Hunter Transmission Project in NSW, for example, has been met with strong resistance from landowners. While the project is intended to support clean energy infrastructure, many locals say the process lacked transparency and ignored community concerns about land use, agriculture, and environmental impacts. 

British philosopher Onora O’Neill focuses on trust and consent in cooperative systems. She argues that ethical cooperation requires conditions where all parties have genuine capacity to consent, particularly in asymmetrical relationships (e.g. government vs local communities). These principles have been embedded in The Clean Energy Council’s national guide which advises that developers must prioritise “clear, accessible and accurate information” and ensure projects are co-designed with communities to reflect cultural, economic and environmental priorities. 

When AGL closed Liddell Power Station in 2023, the company committed to a transition plan. But many workers reported uncertainty and a lack of clarity about what would come next. For a transition to be truly ‘just’, it needs to include more than retraining promises. It needs local job pipelines, early engagement, and co-designed solutions. 

Israeli philosopher Yotam Lurie says that once people engage in joint activity, they take on moral obligations to each other. In the case of climate action, that means governments, industries and communities must not only work together, but they must also do so with care, trust, and respect. 

Rural resistance often stems from real economic vulnerabilities and perceived exclusion from decision-making, not from climate denial. 

Encouragingly there are areas where we are seeing ethical cooperation working well. 

In Gippsland, Victoria, the Gunaikurnai people are working with renewable energy developers to co-design solar projects. These partnerships embed cultural knowledge, ensure local employment, and protect Country showing that ethical cooperation isn’t just a principle. It’s a practical strategy for success. 

The First Nations Clean Energy Network has also shown how co-owned and co-designed projects can reduce costs, build trust, and deliver long-term economic and environmental benefits. 

Climate change is often framed as a technical problem. But it’s also a human one. If we want a sustainable future, we must build it together with ethics, empathy, and equity at the centre. 

As Australian philosopher, Peter Singer suggests, we are morally obligated to reduce the suffering of others which would support a coordinated action where affluent corporations aid vulnerable groups, such as rural or Indigenous communities affected by the energy transition. 

Governments and companies have a responsibility to fund and support this process. That includes advisory boards, transparent impact assessments, and long-term partnerships built on trust. 

If we want rural and regional communities to lead rather than lag in the net-zero transition, we need to take ethical cooperation seriously and build trust within the human system. Sometimes the hardest part is putting aside self-interest, regardless of the good intent and work together to understand the shared purpose. Acknowledging the tensions and being honest about the trade-offs is a strong place to start. This can be done through deep listening and ‘story telling’ that demonstrates respect for cultural and ecological values, rather than just economic ones. 

Tackling climate change is not just about reducing emissions, it’s about justice and fairness, because “we’re in this together” only works when everyone has a say, and everyone has a stake.

To read more about The Energy Charter’s work fostering cooperation in the energy transition, check out our work on the Wimmera Southern Mallee Renewables Collaboration.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Energy Charter News Update March 2025

In our March 2025 newsletter, you’ll find details of our new CEO Executive Council, exciting campaign launches and more:

  • Introducing the new Lived Experience Panel for the Developer Rating Scheme, and our chair Charlie Prell.
  • The big, bold ideas we’re working on in 2025 to put customers and communities at the heart of the energy sector.
  • Our National Landholder + Community Engagement Training, which kicks off this week.
  • The latest episode of the emPOWER podcast, looking at what fuels community anger about energy development.
  • Your invitation to join our Social Licence Community of Practice, looking at the human side of the energy transition.
  • The latest update on our Community Resilience campaign, helping people get prepared for power outages.

Energy Charter Disclosure 2024

Charting a Better Energy Future - EC Disclosure

Putting humans at the heart of the energy transition

Back in 2018, 15 forward-thinking CEOs from across the consumer and energy sectors came together with a bold vision: to deliver better outcomes for customers and communities through a systems-thinking approach. Their co-design work and commitment to five core Energy Charter Principles and a transparent accountability process marked a new era of building trust with those we serve.

Fast forward to today, and we’re proud to have grown to nearly 30 Signatories, working closely with over 80 customer and community representatives nationwide and growing. 

By embracing systems thinking, we’ve strengthened our commitments with human-centered design, tackling challenges and seizing opportunities that no single organisation could address alone.

I’m proud to share the Energy Charter Disclosure 2024. Its purpose is two-fold: to provide an overview of the collective progress we have made over the past year across #BetterTogether initiatives and through our Accountability Process, and to inform where we focus our efforts in the future.

It’s clear we must stay the course with our #BetterTogether initiatives and Communities of Practice to address our two priority areas: energy transition and energy equity.

Sabiene Heindl
CEO
The Energy Charter

Energy Charter Disclosure 2024

Read our 2024 Disclosure to discover: 

  • Our customers and communities we work closely with
  • Messages from our CEO Council Chair and CEO
  • Our collaboration highlights
  • Our 2024 timeline
  • An overview of #BetterTogether initiatives
  • Recalibration of our maturity

Celebrating our key achievements with Energy Charter CEOs

On 2 December 2024, we celebrated our collective achievements for customers and communities at our CEO Forum: Putting Humans at the Heart of the Energy Transition.

We were thrilled to hear from a panel of Energy Charter Signatory CEOs from across the nation to celebrate our collaboration highlights, including:

  • Sean Mc Goldrick, CEO Council Chair + CEO TasNetworks
  • Andrew Bills, CEO Council Deputy Chair + CEO SA Power Networks
  • David Smales, CEO AusNet Services
  • Mark Collette, MD EnergyAustralia
  • John Cleland, CEO Essential Energy
  • Stephanie Unwin, CEO Horizon Power
  • Sabiene Heindl, CEO Energy Charter

Our collaborative highlights

During the CEO Forum, our outgoing CEO Council Chair 2024, Seán Mc Goldrick, CEO TasNetworks proudly shared some key highlights that we have delivered for customers and communities during, including:

  • 1 in 5 Australians saw our “Keep the Money. It’s Yours” Energy Concessions Awareness + Engagement Campaign
  • 2 National campaigns for power outage planning in extreme weather for both Life Support Customers + all Australians
  • 6+ Evidence-based resources on understanding transmission development and undergrounding co-developed in a Community Hub
  • 8+ emPOWER Podcast episodes tailor-made for those driving the energy transition on the ground in regional Australia
  • 10+ Renewable developers and transmission businesses signed up to the Wimmera Southern Mallee Collaboration Framework
  • 18+ Innovative #BetterTogether initiatives delivering outcomes for customers and communities nationally
  • 25+ Lived Experience Panel sessions across Life Support Customers, Community Resilience and Renewable Development Landholders
  • 37+ Better practice social licence commitments implemented to do better in agricultural communities
  • 50% Energy Charter Signatory growth nationally across the supply chain, including renewables
  • 130+ Customer and Community Outcome Group voices shaping our #BetterTogether initiatives
  • 150+ National Landholder and Community Engagement Training participants across 38 organisations
  • 350+ Collaborators across 2 Communities of Practice: First Nations Better Practice Engagement and Social Licence: Building Trust

Seán Mc Goldrick
CEO Council Chair 2024
CEO TasNetworks

And last, but certainly not least, a massive thank you!

Thank you to our Independent Chairs and Administrator, End-User Consultative Group and Consumer + Community Outcome Group members together with the Energy Charter Signatories for your continued support and active participation. 

By working #BetterTogether and leading the way, we can continue to put customers and communities at the centre of our business and the energy system. We can chart a better future for us all, together.

November 2024 News Update

In the November 2024 news update, you can register for the upcoming online event: Powering Through: What to know if you rely on medical equipment during a power outage in collaboration with the Consumer Health Forum for our #BetterTogether Life Support initiative. This will provide critical information to those who rely on life-saving equipment during power interruptions.

We are also proud to welcome the Energy and Water Ombudsman Queensland (EWOQ) and Energy Corporation of NSW (EnergyCo) as Supporters of the Energy Charter.

Looking ahead, we invite you to join us at the Energy Charter CEO Council Forum: Putting Humans at the Heart of the Energy Transition on 2 December hosted by Cath Smith, Chair of our End-User Consultative Group. This is a unique opportunity to hear directly from our CEOs about how we’re collaborating to ensure that customer and community outcomes are front and centre in everything we do.

October 2024 News Update

In the October 2024 news update, we celebrate our CEO, Sabiene Heindl who has been announced the winner of the 2024 International Equality in Energy Transitions (EIET) Woman of Distinction Award! 

We’re also thrilled to publish our Full Signatories annual Disclosures as part of our Accountability Process. Over the next few months, CEOs will meet with their customer, community and stakeholder groups to engage on their Disclosures. Together, they’ll be co-designing clear commitments to drive better outcomes and deliver real impact, reflected in a Feedback Summary.

We’re also excited to welcome our new Energy Charter Supporter: Energy and Water Ombudsman NSW. EWON’s support reflects the meaningful work we are doing to genuinely help customers and communities. We’re thrilled to have Janine Young and her team join us on this important journey! 

A wrap up of the National Landholder Engagement Training in Wagga Wagga

Discover what the 60+ land agents and community engagement professionals got up to at our 3rd National Landholder Engagement Training in September 2024, in Wagga Wagga NSW.

What did the training participants get up to?

On Monday, 2 September 2024, renewable developer and transmission engagement professionals arrived at the Transgrid Discovery Hub in Wagga Wagga for a day packed with insights, networking and celebrating! 

The training kicked off with:

  • A deep dive into what social licence is, where we prioritised trust and established each other’s values before moving into the session
  • Learning about renewable energy development in NSW with Suzanne Westgate, General Manager of Land, Property + Approvals at Transgrid, including what Transgrid is doing to ensure genuine long-term partnerships with landholders and community benefits are delivered within the regions most impacted by transmission projects
  • Listening, learning and asking questions to the Landholder Insights Panels with:
    • Justine Campbell, CEO Regional Development Australia Orana
    • Charlie Prell, ex Chair Farmers for Climate Action
    • Lee Kingma, Tumut landholder
    • Joy Thomas, Chair Ag Energy Social Licence Roundtable
    • Facilitated by our CEO, Sabiene Heindl
  • Drinks, canapes and networking, where Wendy Agar from Engaged Outcomes launched the emPOWER Podcast, a tailor-made for those driving the energy transition on the ground in regional Australia and proudly supported by the Energy Charter
  • Collaboratively creating an artwork to commemorate this training with First Nations artist Luke Penrith Arts and Designs.

emPOWER Podcast launch with Engaged Outcomes

emPOWER Podcast

Launching at the networking function, podcast host Wendy Agar from Engaged Outcomes introduced all the emPOWER Podcast: a podcast tailor-made for those driving the energy transition on the ground in regional Australia

We kicked off with a bang, with our inaugural guest none other than Andrew Dyer, former Australian Energy Infrastructure Commissioner!

Perfect for anyone committed to supporting and understanding our regional communities, this podcast is your go-to resource for effective, respectful engagement during this pivotal time. Stay connected, stay informed, and make a positive impact!

Communicating controversial projects with Risk Communications Specialist

We were thrilled to have Kelly Parkinson, Risk Communication Specialist, running targeted training at our National Landholder Engagement Training on Day 2. Kelly’s rich experience includes working internationally with the community on their concerns about a range of projects. 

This theory and practice workshop included:

  • An introduction to outrage management and audiences
  • “See-saws” or what makes it counter intuitive
  • Role pay exercises using the “see-saws” theory
  • New messaging approach
  • Outrage factors presentation and exercices
  • From fight to fix and barriers

A night of celebrating + learning at the National Landholder Engagement Training Dinner

After an intensive day of risk communications practical training, participants were ready for something special, and what better way to wind down than by heading for the hills?

We indulged in a delightful paddock-to-plate dinner experience, fully immersing ourselves in the heart of this incredible regional community of Wagga Wagga. It was a perfect opportunity to connect with the locals and appreciate the beauty and bounty of the region.

A huge shoutout to Janine Young, Ombudsman at Energy & Water Ombudsman NSW (EWON) and Rod Stowe, former Independent Community and Consumer Advocate at Transgrid, for sharing their wisdom and insights with us. Your guidance continues to inspire us to do better by landholders and communities in regional Australia as we navigate the energy transition.

Exploring renewable energy infrastructure in Wagga Wagga

The final day of the National Landholder Engagement Training was a sea of high-vis! On Day 3, our 60+ renewable energy engagement enthusiasts wrapped up our training with a full-day adventure, exploring some of the most significant renewable energy infrastructure in the Wagga Wagga region. 

It was amazing to witness the spirit of collaboration in action. Seeing so much sharing between industry folk—from renewable energy to transmission and distribution—was truly inspiring.

Where did our land agents and community engagement pros visit?

  • Tetris Battery Storage Facility + Solar Farm: We kicked off the day by getting firsthand insights into this innovative project’s progress
  • Gregadoo Substation Works: Next stop, the Wagga 330kV Substation—where we got up close and personal with the heart of the region’s energy distribution
  • Landholder for Project EnergyConnect: We learned from a landholder and observed tower erection in action across three adjoining holdings as part of Project EnergyConnect. Truly a sight to behold!
  • Lockhart Camp: A quick visit to the temporary construction camp and laydown area gave us a glimpse into the behind-the-scenes logistics
  • Transmission Towers: We saw transmission towers at various stages of construction, each one a step closer to powering our future
  • Bomen Solar Farm: Our final stop brought us to this fully operational solar farm, where we met the host landholder and learned about the farm’s day-to-day operations.

This bus tour wasn’t just about seeing renewable energy in action—it was about connecting with the landholders who play such a critical role in these projects. Their insights are always invaluable as we strive to innovate and improve in this space.

Are you interested in joining future training?

Let us know below if you’d like to attend future National Landholder Engagement Training and be the first to hear about the upcoming dates and topics as well as receive the link to register before it goes out to the public! Email us at director@theenergycharter.com.au.

September 2024 News Update

National Landholder Engagement Training in Wagga Wagga

In the September 2024 news update, we’re excited to announce the launch of the emPOWER Podcast, tailor-made for those driving the energy transition on the ground in regional Australia. You can listen to the first episode with guest Andrew Dyer, former Australian Energy Infrastructure Commissioner about ‘Better Practice Community Engagement in the Energy Transition’.

The National Landholder Engagement Training also kicked-off on 2 September 2024 providing an incredible opportunity for those on the ground in regional communities across Australia to enhance their engagement, built on real life insights from landholders and land agents. 

The #BetterTogether Life Support Customer proposed Rule Change has been submitted to the Australian Energy Market Commission. This work has been led by Esstential Energy and SA Power Networks.

August 2024 News Update

Community Energy Resilience

In the August 2024 news update, we share major updates for the #BetterTogether Life Support Customers initiative regarding the proposed Rule Change submission. We also officially launch the #BetterTogether Community Energy Resilience initiative!

The Australian Energy Infrastructure Commissioner (AEIC) released its 2023 Annual Report and we were thrilled to see the Energy Charter highlighted for its “collaborative leadership” and recognised for our better practice initiatives.

We also welcome our new Director, Renewable Energy, Martine Holberton!