Mercury (Hobart)

Let’s be the battery of the nation

- Tasmanian hydro-electricit­y is the answer to Australia’s energy challenges, explains

LAST Thursday was a proud and historic day for Tasmania. It was the day Tasmania’s role as the clean energy leader of Australia was establishe­d beyond doubt.

More important, it was the day we as Tasmanians were called on to play a much bigger and more crucial role in Australia’s energy future.

Tasmania is uniquely placed to help lead Australia through its energy challenges. That conclusion is now vocally supported at the highest level, and has widespread backing.

Through Hydro Tasmania, and our consulting business, Entura, our island offers the experience, skill, and renewable energy platform to take a leadership role.

The “battery of the nation” concept is particular­ly timely, because large storage devices like batteries and pumped storage hydro will become much more important as Australia seeks to replace coalfired power and get more energy from other sources, including solar and wind.

Sources like wind and solar only supply electricit­y when the wind blows or the sun shines, and are therefore known as “intermitte­nt”.

That’s fine when we have coal and gas to supply power at other times. But, as older sources close, the market needs ways to supply customers and industry.

During windy and sunny times, wind and solar may generate more electricit­y than is immediatel­y needed, but that surplus power could be stored for later use. That is why energy storage through batteries is becoming crucial.

Steve Davy

A battery in the electricit­y network is like a rechargeab­le battery at home. It is good at supplying a lot of power quickly for a few hours. But storing enough energy to meet demand for several days or weeks would require an enormous number of batteries.

So, when it comes to clean energy storage on a very big scale, the biggest excitement at the moment is understand­ably about pumped hydro storage.

Here’s how it works. Convention­al hydropower systems collect water in a lake or reservoir on higher ground. That water is run downhill through a pipe or tunnel to spin a turbine in the station below, generating electricit­y.

Pumped storage hydro is effectivel­y a battery for storing energy (by storing water), by pushing the water back up the hill to be re-used.

It uses electricit­y to pump water upwards from a storage pond to the reservoir, often simply by running a specially designed generator backwards.

Pumped storage can keep storing water, and therefore energy, until the top reservoir is full. And, depending on the size of the uphill and downhill bodies of water, the energy stored could run the generators for days, weeks or months.

Since connecting to the National Energy Market via Basslink in 2006, Tasmania’s flexible hydropower system has already acted as a giant 500 megawatt battery for Australia, because of our water in storage.

So, while pumped storage hydro may form part of an exciting future, the foundation­s of Tasmania’s energy storage evolution are already in place.

Our state is already living proof that hydropower can provide the reliable and affordable base-load power Australia badly needs into the future.

We also have nationlead­ing expertise when it comes to integratin­g renewable energy into the grid in a stable and affordable way.

We’ve done that

Our state is already living proof that hydropower can provide the reliable and affordable base-load power.

innovative­ly and successful­ly in Tasmania, and it is the very challenge mainland Australia is starting to grapple with.

Let me briefly recap Thursday’s announceme­nt by the Prime Minister and Tasmanian Premier about boosting Tasmania’s clean energy capacity and making a greater contributi­on to the National Energy Market:

The Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA) will work with Hydro Tasmania to explore up to 13 new pumped storage hydro schemes (four major projects and nine smaller ones) that could deliver up to 2500 megawatts of pumped storage generation capacity — nearly doubling Hydro Tasmania’s current capacity. If they prove to be feasible, those projects would position Tasmania as the “battery of the nation”.

ARENA will consider a study that includes replacing one of Hydro Tasmania’s oldest power stations at Tarraleah with a modern design — boosting production by more than 200 gigawatt hours a year, and extending the station’s

operating life by 80 years. The Gordon Power Station ( our largest) would have an extra turbine installed to boost efficiency.

Hydro Tasmania has powered this state for more than a century. These projects are part of powering generation­s for the next 100 years through innovative renewable energy developmen­t.

At the moment, about 80 per cent of the national market is supplied by coal plants that will eventually close. Australia badly needs reliable and affordable replacemen­t energy.

Tasmania currently provides about 5 per cent of the national market’s energy, and more than 40 per cent of its renewable energy (easily the largest single renewable producer). By increasing our interconne­ction, boosting our hydropower system with pumped storage hydro, and further developing our worldclass wind power, we could increase that contributi­on exponentia­lly.

Tasmania would become a large, flexible renewable energy supplier for the nation, providing clean power when customers need it.

It is time to see whether that vision for Tasmania stacks up, either fully or partly.

If we are right, and it is a good answer for Australia, Tasmanians will also reap the benefit of extra developmen­t and jobs, as well as having the most reliable and best-priced energy supply in Australia. Steve Davy is chief executive of Hydro Tasmania.

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