Mercury (Hobart)

Renewables powering ahead

Australia has invested $35 billion on renewables since 2017 and leads the world in the installati­on of solar rooftop panels, with many home owners selling excess energy back to the grid.

- DAVID MILLS

WHAT IS THE CASE FOR RENEWABLES?

Naturally replenishi­ng energy sources such as hydro, solar, wind and geothermal power do not emit greenhouse gases, which means they’ll be an essential part of any move towards net zero. Wind and solar power stations are also substantia­lly cheaper than coal, gas and nuclear.

HOW MUCH OF OUR ENERGY COMES FROM RENEWABLES?

According to the federal Government, 24 per cent of Australia’s electricit­y came from renewable energy in 2020, up from 21 per cent in 2019.

Others put the figure at 27 per cent, with the proportion varying widely from state to state. Tasmania leads the way with 99 per cent renewables, while Queensland has just 16 per cent.

But the proportion is rising fast across the country, according to Kane Thornton (inset), CEO of the Clean Energy Council. “If you go back to 2015 the number was about 15 per cent, so it’s fair to say there’s been an accelerati­on,” he said.

“I suspect by the end of this decade we’ll be at least through 50 per cent, possibly up towards 60 and 70 per cent. The technologi­es are now proven. It’s clear the dominant source of energy generation in the future will be wind and solar, and then it’s a question of how much other technologi­cal solutions we need to support that.”

WHAT RENEWABLES ARE MOST POPULAR IN AUSTRALIA?

Australia leads the world in rooftop solar, with installati­ons on nearly three million houses. According to federal Energy Minister, Angus Taylor, Australia has invested $35 billion in renewables since 2017 and we are deploying new solar and wind 10 times faster than the global average per person.

Solar, including rooftop panels, large-scale sunlight farms and mid-size industrial uses, represents just over 36 per cent of the renewables sector. Energy from wind power constitute­s another 36 per cent, while hydro represents 23 per cent and bioenergy (mainly used in the sugar industry) contribute­s 5 per cent.

SOUNDS GREAT. WHAT’S THE DRAWBACK?

The sun doesn’t always shine and the wind doesn’t always blow.

Energy Minister Taylor said Australia should be proud of the fact it is a renewable energy powerhouse, but “renewables need reliable generation to back them up”. “Reliable sources of energy, like coal and gas, will continue to be needed to keep the lights on and deliver 24/7 power for

households and businesses as more and more renewables enter the system,” he said.

Mr Thornton disputes the use of the term ‘reliable’. “Wind farms very rarely break down, solar farms very rarely break down,” he said. They are variable, he said, but improvemen­ts in weather prediction and power storage, including batteries, are helping ameliorate some of those concerns.

Mr Thornton said it’s “easy to ridicule batteries” as they can’t power the country alone, and they won’t. “But batteries are very good at short periods of storage, up to about four hours, which for a lot of the challenges and demand changes in the system is what’s needed. Hydro power plays a role in storage for those longer periods,” he said.

Batteries are also getting increasing­ly cheaper.

Stedman Ellis, the CEO of the

Future

Battery

Industries Co-operative

Research

Centre, recently told a

Minerals Council of Australian forum that the global battery sector had grown ninefold

over the past decade. “The average unit cost of batteries declined 88 per cent over the past decade, and it’s expected to decline by 50 per cent over the next decade,” he said. And the boom is expected to continue, with the value of

Australia’s exports of lithium, a key ingredient in the manufactur­e of batteries, expected to grow by nearly 370 per cent by 2030.

While the innovation­s in batteries will continue to favour the uptake of renewables, stronger transmissi­on systems, such as the recently announced interconne­ctor between NSW and South Australia, are another key element.

“At 5pm, 6pm or 7pm in Sydney when the sun is starting to go down and people are ramping up their demand [for electricit­y] you can still be drawing power across from South Australia into the grid to power NSW,” Mr Thornton said.

IS OUR GRID SET UP FOR RENEWABLE ENERGY?

The rise of renewables such as rooftop solar presents particular challenges, because our power grid was designed for supply to come from power stations, rather than for smaller amounts of power to be generated in millions of places at once.

The Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA) estimates over 40 per cent of energy customers will use so-called “distribute­d” energy resources (such as rooftop solar) by 2027, and that number will grow to more than 60 per cent by 2050.

Currently, solar rooftop owners can sell their excess power back to the grid, but the Australian Energy Market Commission has warned this system is creating “traffic jams”, and is nearing its technical limits. Export charges for users have been mooted, among other solutions, with a poll commission­ed by the group Solar Citizens showing people will be less likely to install solar if charges are introduced.

DON’T THOSE SOLAR PANELS JUST BECOME JUNK WHEN THEY STOP WORKING?

Moves are afoot to stop this. Victoria recently banned sending solar panels to landfill, and an increasing number of companies are now specialisi­ng in recycling the components of panels, including the aluminium railing, copper wires and glass. “Pretty well all solar panels have a 20-year manufactur­er’s warranty, and most will operate for 25 and 30 years,” Mr Thornton said. “A lot of [Australia’s] three million panels went in over the last two to five years.”

Once the wind farm is built and running, the complaints generally go away

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia