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The obvious problem is smurph, most think the looming issue can be solved with the wave of a wand, but when they wave it they will find the magic wand's batteries are flat.Something I will note is that when I first posted on this forum about Australia’s looming energy problems, the Prime Minister’s name was John Howard.
Since then it has gone from a problem on the horizon to one bashing on the front door and no government, of either persuasion, has sensibly addressed it.
It’ll take the lights actually going out in NSW or Vic to bring about change.
Yes, I was reading RCR Tomlinson are putting in a few solar plants for them. Seems one of the farms is going to cost RCR dollars with miss quoting and running over budget.Queensland are setting up a new state-owned electricity generation business focused on renewables.
http://statements.qld.gov.au/Statement/2018/8/30/cleanco-to-make-power-bills-cheaper
I make the observation that it's another thing which adds to the overall situation that WA, NT, Qld and Tas all have reasonably well run and reliable power systems whereas NSW/ACT, Vic and SA are in rather a lot of trouble going forward.
SA has taken some steps forward, albeit not enough thus far, but NSW and Vic are barreling down the road toward a cliff hoping that Qld and Tas are going to bail them out.
Should be really interesting when Liddell goes, taking 2000MW out of the equation. What is the difference, between peak winter and peak summer load, smurph?AEMO has declared a Lack Of Reserve level 1 for NSW between 18:00 and 19:30 today.
In simple terms that means the system is two steps away from blackouts. One generator failure could be coped with but anything beyond that and the lights go out.
There's about 3400 MW of generating plant out of service in NSW at the moment.
Apparently the answer is simple.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-09-...inister-power-price-solution-curious/10188496
At last you people over East can sleep easy, the problem is sorted, from the article:
"The lowest cost replacement for this retiring capacity and energy will be a portfolio of resources, including solar (28 gigawatts), wind (10.5 GW) and storage (17 GW and 90 GWh), complemented by 500 megawatts of flexible gas plant and transmission investment," it said.
Sorry for my concern, I didn't realise, it was that easy.
Only 500 megawatts of flexible gas plant, that is a really small power station, should be able to put that in suburbia or just outside.
Here we go, the gas industry is saying we are stopping foreign investment in taking more of our gas, because we want to keep some for ourselves. WTF
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-09-...overnment-policy-investor-confidence/10204284
It really is about time we taxed them by volume, rather than by what they say, they make from it.
They can justify charging us 10%gst on what we import from overseas on ebay, but they can't charge resource companies for what they export.
Here's one for sptrawler. Hydrogen technology breakthrough by CSIRO.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-08-...-csiro-game-changer-export-potential/10082514
I really don't think these articles improve the current debate around energy policy, just because something is possible doesn't mean it should be done. Referring to the below article
Australia could be 100% renewable by 2030s, meet Paris targets by 2025
https://reneweconomy.com.au/austral...ble-by-2030s-meet-paris-targets-by-2025-2025/
Strongly agreed.I really don't think these articles improve the current debate around energy policy
Having an over abundance of wind and solar on a mild Sunday afternoon in SA doesn’t help just a few hours later when the sun goes down and electricity consumption goes up. It doesn’t fly planes or harvest crops either.
People in Australia have an expectation of electricity 24/7, when they switch on a switch they expect something to happen, they live in a first World country and pay a lot of tax.Solved by storage surely ?
But I guess that's an over simplification too.
People in Australia have an expectation of electricity 24/7, when they switch on a switch they expect something to happen, they live in a first World country and pay a lot of tax.
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