The Guardian (USA)

Net zero nuance: commentary on decarbonis­ing the grid misses the mark on batteries and nuclear

- Graham Readfearn

Commentary on decarbonis­ing Australia’s electricit­y network seems to be heading towards net zero nuance, with questionab­le claims about the costs of batteries and nuclear power in the past week.

One claim relies on an estimate of the cost of a multibilli­on-dollar nuclear plant that doesn’t exist yet, and another puts a multitrill­ion-dollar figure against the cost of building batteries.

First to nuclear power, which, we should remember, has been effectivel­y banned in Australia since the late 1990s.

On page three of the Sunday Telegraph in Sydney, columnist Piers Akerman wrote an “exclusive” news story showing “nuclear energy is cheaper” than coal, gas, solar or wind.

Such a claim would overturn pretty much all serious analysis of electricit­y costs around the globe. So where did it come from? The Internatio­nal Energy Agency maybe, or perhaps the CSIRO?

No. Akerman quoted “new data” from Tony Irwin, who is a nuclear industry veteran and a technical director at a consultanc­y company with “specialist industry knowledge on the procuremen­t and developmen­t of nuclear technologi­es” with a focus on small modular reactors (SMR).

According to Akerman, Irwin’s data showed “nuclear-generated power” costs $5,596/kW to build, compared with $14,882 for large-scale solar, $12,372 for wind and about $10,000 for coal and gas, both with carbon capture and storage attached.

The Nationals leader, David Littleprou­d, who wants to see nuclear power considered in Australia, tweeted a link to the story saying: “Perhaps nuclear isn’t a dirty word after all?”

But one problem with using Irwin’s numbers is they are based on an estimate of the cost of one particular SMR design which has not yet been built and won’t produce power until at least 2029.

The estimate comes from a USbased company that’s trying to build its SMR in partnershi­p with Utah Associated Municipal Power Systems which has budgeted more than $8.5bn for the

plant. In 2020, the US Department of Energy approved up to $2bn of funding to back it.

SMRs have not yet been commercial­ised. The name might suggest they’re neat and off-the-shelf, but while dozens of designs and developmen­t projects are in existence, they are not something any government can currently go out and buy and plug into their electricit­y grids.

Irwin told Temperatur­e Check the numbers had been published on the consultanc­y’s website in October 2021, and provided a link.

His calculatio­ns included “adjustment­s” for the percentage of time each type can produce electricit­y, the lifetime of plants and how flexible they are, which significan­tly pushes up the cost of all other forms of electricit­y except SMR nuclear.

The CSIRO’s latest draft of its GenCost report that explores how much different electricit­y sources will cost says there is no prospect of an SMR plant being built in Australia before 2030.

By then, it estimated a cost of between $7,700/kW and about $17,000/ kW – at least five times the cost of largescale solar in 2030.

The GenCost report says, by 2030, the costs of other electricit­y generation and supply – including large-scale solar, wind and especially batteries – will have dropped even further.

The secretary of the Victorian branch of the Australian Institute of Energy, Glenne Drover, who is a broad supporter of nuclear power, told Temperatur­e Check the costs of SMR reactors were “still speculativ­e” and it would take about five years before the actual costs became clearer.

He said nuclear power “should play a vital role in decarbonis­ation for countries that are not blessed with the space, wind and sun that Australia has”.

“So we might never need it, but we probably need to wait to 2030 to see how the renewables decarbonis­ation plan is going.”

Dud battery charge

Would it really cost $6.5tn to power Australia only on batteries, and are any electricit­y system experts seriously suggesting that’s what they’re for?

The short answers are no, and no. Yet this figure has been used at least twice in commentari­es this month.

In a column arguing “the transition to net zero emissions will be hard and expensive”, the Nine News political editor, Chris Uhlmann, said whatever technology was used to support renewables “won’t be cheap” and pointed to a report that “calculated the cost of battery storage for Australia at $6.5tn”.

Last week, Claire Lehmann, a columnist in the Australian wrote: “The battery storage required to power the whole of Australia has been estimated to cost $6.5tn. If this is a cost-effective solution, then God help us all.”

So what’s the basis for this claim? The figure comes from a 2019 report from Industry Super Australia. The authors took the cost of South Australia’s Tesla battery and, in a back-of-envelope calculatio­n, extrapolat­ed that battery’s capacity until it could power the entire electricit­y grid for a day and a half. That was 7.5TWh of electricit­y, the report claimed, although the authors said they were not suggesting “any attempt should be made to provide all back-up using batteries”.

Dr Dylan McConnell, an energy systems analyst at the University of Melbourne, said the use of the number was a “strawman”, adding: “I can’t believe anyone still takes it remotely seriously.”

The Australian Energy Market Operator’s draft plan to decarbonis­e the national electricit­y market has said that by 2050, Australia will need about 620GWh of storage – which includes all storage technologi­es, including batteries and dams.

Expressed another way, that’s about 12 times less electricit­y than the figure being plucked from the Industry Super report.

McConnell said: “There is no justificat­ion for the requiremen­t to store the entire grid’s worth of energy for 1.5 days. If that was a legitimate requiremen­t, you wouldn’t try and meet that requiremen­t with only lithium-ion batteries.”

Very bad paleo diet

Fossil fuels advocate Alex Epstein, a regular guest on Sky News Australia, last week enraged the climate science community by tweeting a chart tracking CO2 levels going back hundreds of millions of years in Earth’s history.

The all-time high is somewhere around 6,000 parts per million (current levels are 420ppm). Epstein said it would take emissions increasing until well past the year 2100 for levels to get to even a quarter of that level, and before which “we can expect to have ultra-cost-effective non-carbon nuclear energy”.

Regardless of what happens with nuclear energy, an important question to ask is what else could the planet expect if CO2 levels got up to 1,500 ppm?

Dr Georgy Falster, a paleoclima­te scientist at the Australian National University, told Temperatur­e Check: “The last time the atmospheri­c CO2 concentrat­ion might have been as high as 1,500ppm – about 3.5 times higher than it is today – was during the midcretace­ous period, around 100m years ago.

“The paleo record suggests that at this time, the average global temperatur­e was around 15C to 20C hotter than present – that’s at least double what it is today,” Falster said.

“Global sea level was on average 75 to 250 metres higher than present-day mean sea level.”

Dr Ben Henley, a climate scientist at the University of Wollongong, said at just 1.5C to 2C of warming, “there will already be catastroph­ic consequenc­es to many natural ecosystems and humankind”.

Recreating ancient climates with spiralling CO2 levels today would mean “practicall­y every coastal city on Earth would be flooded and human communitie­s would be decimated”, Henley said.

Epstein may be hoping those cheap nuclear power plants will be able to operate underwater, providing there are enough humans left that need airconditi­oners.

 ?? ?? ‘Would it really cost $6.5tn to power Australia only on batteries, and is anyone seriously suggesting that’s what they’re for?’
‘Would it really cost $6.5tn to power Australia only on batteries, and is anyone seriously suggesting that’s what they’re for?’

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