Stop Venn Energy
Boree Solar Project Opposition · Geurie NSW
Venn Energy's most recent Australian proposal — and the one with the most time remaining to act. The Boree Solar Project covers 1,322 hectares of RU1 Primary Production land north of Geurie, approximately 21km south-east of Dubbo. It was announced in early 2025, months after the Lambruk and Cooba communities had already been fighting for years.
The community's response has been swift. Over 1,000 people have joined the Stop Boree Solar Project Facebook group. The campaign has generated coverage across The Land, Daily Liberal, and Central Western Daily. And critically, the EIS has not yet been publicly exhibited — the formal submission window is still ahead.
This is the only Venn Energy Australian project where community opposition can still formally influence the planning outcome. The Cooba approval — granted despite significant opposition — is the clearest possible signal that the EIS submission window must not be missed.
The Lambruk Solar Project near Loomberah, 15km south-east of Tamworth, has been in planning since November 2022 — making it the most advanced of Venn Energy's NSW proposals. A 1,530-hectare site covering primary production and rural small lot land, it would install up to 850,000 solar panels just metres from homes, a primary school, and the Loomberah church and memorial hall.
The Loomberah community has been organised and vocal for over three years. The Loomberah Family & Farmland committee formally opposed the project during the scoping phase. Community members attended a Venn Energy consultation in October 2025 and left feeling unheard — their questions about compensation went unanswered and the company dismissed opposition as unrepresentative of broader community views.
The EIS was submitted in December 2025 and is now awaiting public exhibition. The Lambruk community is approaching the most critical phase of its campaign — the formal submission window. The Boree community should watch this closely and prepare accordingly.
If you are from the Lambruk community: contact the Loomberah Family & Farmland committee or Local Passion United Voice. If you are from Boree, connect with the Lambruk campaign — their experience of the EIS process is directly applicable to what Geurie will face.
Cooba is the cautionary tale that every Boree and Lambruk community member needs to understand. Venn Energy's 1,147-hectare Cooba Solar Project near Colbinabbin — in Victoria's Heathcote wine region — was approved by the Victorian Planning Minister in June 2025, despite:
The Victorian Government used the Development Facilitation Program to fast-track approval — a mechanism that bypasses standard community consultation timelines. The community had fought for over 29 months and still lost.
The lesson for Boree: community opposition alone is not enough. Formal EIS submissions — individual, in your own words, through the NSW Planning Portal — are the only mechanism with legal weight in the approval process. Every unique submission counts.
Three communities, three states, one developer. Venn Energy's Australian projects share the same playbook: lease land before consulting neighbours, provide inadequate notification, refuse broad community meetings, and pursue approval through state-level mechanisms that bypass local councils.What Loomberah learned about the EIS process in 2023 is directly applicable to Geurie in 2025. What the Colbinabbin community's 29-month fight against Cooba revealed about political pressure and its limits is a lesson both NSW communities need to absorb.A coordinated response — sharing legal learnings, media contacts, political relationships, submission strategies, and campaign tactics — is exponentially more powerful than three isolated local campaigns.