We conduct public interest financial analysis on the most profound economic transformation since the industrial revolution: the transition from fossil fuels to clean energy.
About
Climate Energy Finance (CEF) is a think tank established in 2022 that works probono in the public interest to accelerate decarbonisation. We conduct research and analyses on global financial issues related to the global energy transition from fossil fuels to clean energy, as well as the implications for the Australian economy, with a key focus on the threats and opportunities for Australian investments and exports. Read more
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The 4th Climate Investor Forum 2026
The 4th Climate Investor Forum was held on 17–18 February 2026 at Centrepiece, Melbourne, bringing together delegates to explore climate […] Read more
EVENTS | Conference on Transmission Infrastructure Australia
11-12 February 2026 | Swissôtel Sydney Industry leaders gathered at Swissôtel Sydney for the 2026 Conference on Transmission Infrastructure Australia, […] Read more
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INTERVIEW | Tim on ABC – Afternoon Briefing
ABC News
Tim Buckley, CEO of Climate Energy Finance, says Australia should welcome data centre investment linked to AI and renewables, but […] Read more
Data centres urged to BYO clean energy, train workers
Michael West Media
Demand is expected to balloon from 1.35 gigawatts now to between 5-8 GW by 2035 on projections prepared in a Clean Energy Finance Corporation and Baringa report. New approvals should come with clear community benefits, Climate Energy Finance director Tim Buckley said. “After all, the data centres can only be built leveraging the existing publicly funded water and grid infrastructure we have all paid for,” Mr Buckley said. Climate and Energy Minister Chris Bowen said data centres should be building new solar and wind capacity and have “flexibility and redundancy” built in to protect the network. Read more
New demand, new renewables: Industry calls on data centres to BYO solar, wind and storage
Renew Economy
The alliance notes that where data centre growth drives the need for new transmission, firming or network augmentation, those costs should not be socialised onto households and small businesses. “Data centre investment is red hot, so we expect our governments to ensure that giving approvals to new infrastructure projects comes with clear community benefits,” says Climate Energy Finance director Tim Buckley. “After all, the data centres can only be built leveraging the existing publicly funded water and grid infrastructure we have all paid for.” “Approvals should be conditional upon new long-term firmed renewables PPA as a pre-requisite.” Read more
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