Friday, 10 December 2021

Early exit for coal as National Electricity Market prepares for renewable future.

Extract from ABC News

By political reporter Melissa Clarke
Posted 
A view of the Liddell coal-fired power plant from across a lake, with swans in the foreground
Coal-fired power stations currently contribute about 23GW of energy to the NEM.(ABC News: John Gunn)
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Coal-fired power generators are expected to shut down nearly three times faster than previously anticipated and will have exited the National Electricity Market (NEM) entirely by 2043, according to an updated plan from the Australian Energy Market Operator (AEMO).

The AEMO has released the updated plan for the future of the NEM, following widespread consultation with the sector.

Coal-fired power stations contribute about 23 gigawatts of energy to the NEM, with 5GW to be withdrawn by 2030.

But the AEMO now expects as much as 14GW of coal-fired power to be withdrawn by 2030 and to have entirely exited the electricity market by 2043.

"Over the past decade, coal-fired generators have withdrawn from the market before their announced dates, and competitive and operational pressures will intensify with the ever-increasing penetration of cheap renewable generation," the AEMO's draft 2022 Integrated Systems Plan sets out.

Demand for electricity is expected to double between now and 2050 to account for both the growth in demand and the shift away from other sources of energy, such as natural gas and petrol.

"Today the NEM delivers just under 180 terawatt hours [TWh] of electricity to industry and homes per year. The NEM would need to nearly double that by 2050," the draft plan states.

Increase in wind and solar generators 

The changes needed in the NEM to accommodate the shift from coal-fired power to renewable sources spread more widely around the country are significant, according to AEMO's modelling.

Large-scale renewable generators like wind and solar farms will need to increase nine-fold, while smaller scale solar (such as rooftop and community solar panels) will need to grow five-fold.

More than 10,000 kilometres of new transmission lines are needed, along with more "firming" capacity to back-up the variable output of renewable energy generators.

In a statement, AEMO CEO Daniel Westerman said the rapid transformation of the NEM has been accelerating due to "significant investment in renewable generation, storage and firming generation as coal plants exit, and improvements to transmission."

He said the changes anticipated in the draft plan would deliver "secure, reliable and affordable electricity" while also reducing emissions, but warned there would need to be a co-operative approach.

"It is essential that communities, governments and industry collaborate to meet the aspirations of consumers and the communities that will host new infrastructure."

The Climate Council has pointed to the record levels of renewable electricity generation and declining use of gas this spring as evidence gas should not be relied on as a "transition" fuel to help shift away from coal-fired power.

"Gas simply cannot compete with renewable energy," said Climate Councillor and former BP Australasia President, Greg Bourne.

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