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Labors half trillion dollar lie on renewables plan (Read 3569 times)
Aurora Complexus
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Re: Labors half trillion dollar lie on renewables plan
Reply #45 - Nov 23rd, 2024 at 9:35pm
 
The Telegraph is a Murdoch outlet

Since you can't provide a link to the story (because it's behind a paywall) I'm going to assume the author is Andrew "half-shot" Bolt.

We've heard this opinion a thousand times.
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Re: Labors half trillion dollar lie on renewables plan
Reply #46 - Nov 23rd, 2024 at 10:29pm
 
lee wrote on Nov 23rd, 2024 at 7:54pm:
freediver wrote on Nov 23rd, 2024 at 7:47pm:
Do you have a point Lee, or are you just trying to ask the dumbest possible questions?


No.


Didn't think so. Perhaps now we can get back to Dave explaining why he thinks we aren't allowed to use coal in Australia.
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Re: Labors half trillion dollar lie on renewables plan
Reply #47 - Nov 23rd, 2024 at 10:54pm
 
Daves2017 wrote on Nov 20th, 2024 at 2:24pm:
Regardless I’m totally in support of nuclear and can’t quite understand why we can have nuclear submarines but not power generation?


I'm totally in support of nuclear too.

But I can see that nuclear-powered submarines have an advantage over land nuclear. They can head out to sea, or be towed out to sea, and sunk somewhere deep.

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Frank
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Re: Labors half trillion dollar lie on renewables plan
Reply #48 - Nov 24th, 2024 at 9:10am
 
Aurora Complexus wrote on Nov 23rd, 2024 at 9:35pm:
The Telegraph is a Murdoch outlet

Since you can't provide a link to the story (because it's behind a paywall) I'm going to assume the author is Andrew "half-shot" Bolt.

We've heard this opinion a thousand times.


I did provide the link.
It is The Australian, not the Tele. And it's Chris Uhlman, not Bolt.


Reading the two long is excepts I provided, you should be able to think of something more substantial than a Bbwianesque yawn or an equally enervated 'I'm not talkin' to no Bolt'.



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Re: Labors half trillion dollar lie on renewables plan
Reply #49 - Nov 24th, 2024 at 9:17am
 
Belinda Jones lives a short drive and a world away from Parliament House in Canberra.

The chasm between her life and political platitudes is written in the latest electricity bill of the mother of three and full-time carer.

“This is what I call a payday killer,” Ms Jones told Sky News, as she used a wooden spoon to point to handwritten calculations scrawled on the bill.

“It’s come in at $1073.31. My pay, which is the pay of most age pensioners, is around $1144. This leaves me, after I pay this bill, $71 and nine cents.”

Ms Jones recalls Labor’s election pledge of cheaper, greener electricity; with prices driven down by the low generating costs of wind and solar power.

“It will see electricity prices fall from the current level by $275 for households by 2025, at the end of our first term,” Anthony Albanese said when launching Labor’s energy transition plan from opposition in December 2021.

Since then power prices have marched up to the point where the Albanese government was forced to give every household a $300 bill subsidy in its May budget.

Ms Jones is enraged by the $75 in government relief, written as a line in her quarterly bill, because she sees it as tokenistic and the polar opposite of what was promised.

“Seventy-five dollars when I was at uni fed us for a week,” she said. “Seventy-five dollars now is worse than anything I’ve ever seen, because it buys you next to nothing. So that’s why we are forced to shop at the food bank.”

Ms Jones is highly educated but when her husband suffered a brain injury at work her family’s life was up-ended, as they were driven into poverty.

“That turned me into a full-time carer for him, and raising the kids,” she said. “He’s not on (National Disability Insurance Scheme), so we are just making do. So I’ve paid my taxes, I’ve done my time, and now we’ve hit bad luck. So that’s where it’s at.”

An investigation by Sky News into the actual costs of the energy transition set out to test the government claim that more wind and solar generation will drive down retail electricity prices. The documentary team focused on the evidence of similar electricity transitions in the US and interviewed experts who run electricity systems, or who have real-world experience in energy.

All pointed to a series of reasons the Albanese government’s pledge of cheaper power was always going to fail in the real world.

Replacing fuel-burning generators with weather-dependent energy harvesters means the new system must be massively overbuilt and spread over a vast amount of land. Turning that on-again, off-again generation into a 24/7 electricity system means it must be backed up by a complex life-support system of batteries, hydropower and gas. Then all the widely scattered generation has to be connected to towns and cities with an extra 10,000km of transmission lines. Each step adds costs.

Queensland University professor Steven Wilson has worked in energy in 30 countries for more than 30 years. He says it’s fanciful to claim that gathering electricity from nature is cheap.

“So you’ve got to turn it from the raw form, of wind or sun, which is free, into the desired form, electricity, which is definitely not free,” Professor Wilson said. “And you’ve got to move it from the place where it is to the place where the customer needs it. And you need to time shift, from the time that it’s coming in to the time that the customer needs it. So achieving all of that requires a larger, more complex, more expensive system than the system we grew up with.”

Richard McIndoe ran Energy Australia for a decade and has been in the energy business for 35 years. He said transmission lines made up about 9 per cent of the cost of every electricity bill. Building more of them would drive power prices higher.

“So if we have to double the amount of transmission to interconnect all the new generation on the grid, then that’s going to be part of your bill for the next 25 years as that investment is paid off,” Mr McIndoe said.
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Re: Labors half trillion dollar lie on renewables plan
Reply #50 - Nov 24th, 2024 at 9:18am
 
He feared an even bigger cost would come closer to home, if the poles and wires of the distribution system had to be rebuilt to cope with the growing stress placed on the system by rooftop solar and electric vehicles. Distribution costs make up 35 per cent of every electricity bill.

“Now that network of distribution is hundreds of thousands of kilometres across Australia connecting all the homes and businesses across this enormous country,” he said. “The need for more capacity and more infrastructure on the poles and wires along our streets is going to add to the cost of our bills.”

The government pledge also failed to account for the fact that the eastern grid, the National Electricity Market, is exactly as advertised: a wholesale electricity marketplace.

Daniel Westerman, chief executive of the Australian Energy Market Operator, told Sky: “Most people probably don’t know that energy in Australia is bought and sold every five minutes, and we manage the buying and selling and settle the trades just like the ASX.”

In that marketplace the highest cost of generation, not the lowest cost, sets the wholesale price of power. And because wind and solar leave large supply gaps in the morning and evening hours of peak demand, the price is more often than not set by more expensive forms of generation. As the low-cost generators of brown and black coal are retired, the wholesale price will, more often, be set by the higher prices of gas, hydro power and batteries.

Wholesale costs make up 35 per cent of every electricity bill.

And then there is a relatively new line in all bills, for green schemes. They make up 10 per cent of most bills, building money to subsidise large and small renewable energy schemes. Since 2013 Australian electricity customers have contributed $14bn to subsidise large-scale wind and solar developers, and another $11.5bn for households and businesses installing rooftop solar.

Jim Robb is chief executive and president of the North American Electric Reliability Corporation. Appointed by congress, his unique job is to oversee the reliability and security of the bulk power system across the entire interconnected American grid, which includes all of the US and parts of Canada and Mexico.

“There’s a line that a lot of people will latch on to that as we move toward more renewable sources of energy, that costs will decline because we don’t have to pay for fuel,” Mr Robb said. “But we do have to pay for the capital required to convert free wind and free sunshine into electricity. We’re going to have to pay for the capital to distribute it to customers, and we’re going have to pay for the creation of those reliability services.”
Woodside chief executive Meg O’Neill told Sky News that the real problem with the transition was that politicians and activists were not levelling with the Australian people and they were using aspirations, not data, to make their case.

“I actually worry about the Australians who are battling it out every day,” Ms O’Neill said. “Those are the ones who are going to feel the greatest impact from power price rises from blackouts. You know, those are gonna be the households that are struggling when their energy prices are rising.”

Belinda Jones is the face of that struggle. She is angry pledges of cheap green power turned out to be empty as she struggles to make ends meet and her family shiver through Canberra’s long, cold winters.

“It’s not just about me,” she said. “It’s not just about the budget, it’s about my family. I’m a mum, I’m the CEO of this family, and I’m responsible for putting food on the table, paying the bills, and keeping it all together.

“And it’s really full-on. My kids have grown up … and now I’m struggling to feed them. They’re embarrassed by me giving this interview because they feel shame. But I don’t. I see this as a political issue. I see it as a structural issue. I consider that when mothers are dumpster-diving to feed their families, that’s not okay.”

The Real Cost of Net Zero airs on Sky News Australia on Tuesday, November 19 at 8pm.
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Re: Labors half trillion dollar lie on renewables plan
Reply #51 - Nov 24th, 2024 at 9:20am
 
“I want people to really understand what’s happening with the electricity grid and why the promise of a greener and cheaper future … was never going to happen, even at the time it was promised,” Mr Uhlmann told Sky News Australia.

“The cost of electricity is not set by the lowest cost of generation.

“It is set by the highest cost of generation.”

https://www.skynews.com.au/australia-news/politics/labors-greener-and-cheaper-fu...
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Re: Labors half trillion dollar lie on renewables plan
Reply #52 - Nov 24th, 2024 at 9:31am
 
freediver wrote on Nov 23rd, 2024 at 10:29pm:
lee wrote on Nov 23rd, 2024 at 7:54pm:
[quote author=freediver link=1731635153/37#37 date=1732355228]Do you have a point Lee, or are you just trying to ask the dumbest possible questions?


No. [/quot
Didn't think so. Perhaps now we can get back to Dave explaining why he thinks we aren't allowed to use coal in Australia.


It’s my understanding we are in the process of closing down our coal fired power stations primarily because of there age and climate damage ( if you believe it).
This  assists us in meeting the Paris agreement.

The buzz wording is “ transition away from coal”.
So while coal cannot in the future be used to generate electricity in this country because it’s bad for the environment it’s perfectly ok for us to ship it overseas to be used to generate electricity.

Just like uranium, coal under goes some miracle at sea which means it’s no longer a dangerous pollution source?

Sorry the late reply, been walking the cat.

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Thomas A. Edison said as early as in 1931, “I’d put my money on the sun and solar energy. What a source of power! I hope we don’t have to wait until oil and coal run out before we tackle that.”
 
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Re: Labors half trillion dollar lie on renewables plan
Reply #53 - Nov 24th, 2024 at 9:49am
 
The astonishing cost of our net-zero delusion
It is impossible to overstate the stakes if our energy transition runs off the rails. Red lights are flashing here and around the world.



“There’s a line that a lot of people will latch onto that as we move toward more renewable sources of energy, that costs will decline because we don’t have to pay for fuel,” Robb says. “But we do have to pay for the capital required to convert free wind and free sunshine into electricity. We’re going to have to pay for the capital to distribute it to customers, and we’re going have to pay for the creation of those reliability services.”

This is no surprise. Anyone watching the cautionary tales of South Australia, Germany and California could read the signals years ago that the rhetoric of a cheap, reliable green power was a fraud. It was obvious when Labor produced its energy policy, including the mythic figure of a $275 drop in power prices. Bowen was privately warned not to claim prices would fall.

And the dirty little secret in the construction of the green grid is that it cannot work as an electricity system without gas.

“We will have batteries, we’ll have pumped hydro,” Westerman says. “But we’ll have times like we’ve seen earlier this year where there’s not much wind and there’s not much sun, and the gas-fired power stations are really required to back up the reliability of the grid. They are there as the ultimate backstop.”

The energy transition road map is the Integrated System Plan developed by AEMO. It shows that, as coal retires, 15 gigawatts of gas will be needed for the eastern grid to operate securely to 2050 and beyond. This is not just a little bit of gas, it’s enough to power 15 million homes. As a future grid dominated by wind and solar generation cannot form a reliable electricity system without gas, the fossil fuel’s role is more backbone than backstop.

This plan is being built on the railroad tracks laid down by the government. And, lest we forget, last year Bowen told the world climate summit that “fossil fuels have no ongoing role to play in our energy systems” if the Paris targets are to be met.

One begins to wonder if the minister understands that words have meaning. The distance between what he says and what is real is as vast as the generation gaps Labor’s decarbonisation ambitions are punching in the electricity system.

There is another, terrifying, possibility that would explain this reality gap: that the minister, his staff, his department and all the states and territories that have been pushing ambitious renewables targets for a decade have no idea what they are doing.


That Australia’s political class, and the bureaucrats who advise them are breathtakingly, stunningly energy illiterate. That they have been ruled by virtue signalling and not facts.

This is now my working theory. Here is the evidence.

If any of them did understand the limitations of the technologies they champion, then all states building a wind and solar-dependent grid would have also vigorously pursued the development of domestic gas supplies.

As they raised their targets for more wind and solar, they would have raised their ambitions to secure plentiful gas. More supply would mean lower electricity costs and would have buttressed the grid, to allow for the orderly retirement of coal generation.

They did the opposite. Victoria imposed a ban on gas exploration and NSW did nothing to encourage it. Worse, energy ministers demonised the fuel. The critical gas shortages all now face is entirely a product of not just bad, but culpably ignorant, policies.

If any of the energy ministers who signed up to Labor’s Capacity Investment Scheme actually knew what they were doing, then gas would have been on the menu of vital technologies needed to support the energy transition. Yet they delivered a plan which specifically excludes gas. Uniquely in the world, Australia has a capacity investment scheme which forbids investing in dispatchable capacity.

If the politicians and bureaucrats had paid attention to what is happening in any jurisdiction attempting a similar transition, then they might have picked up a pretty significant signal.

In June 2022, The New York Times reported that the EU had “endorsed labelling some gas and nuclear energy projects ‘green’, allowing them access to hundreds of billions of euros in cheap loans and even state subsidies”.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/inquirer/the-astonishing-cost-of-our-netzero-de...
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Re: Labors half trillion dollar lie on renewables plan
Reply #54 - Nov 24th, 2024 at 9:58am
 
Matt Kean (gawdelpus) was the NSW energy minister and is now Climate Change Authority chairman. As recently as last month he said “people calling for gas to be included in the capacity investment scheme are trying to stop renewables”.

“That just seems like a recipe for much higher electricity bills for Australian consumers, and they’re bills that we can’t afford to pay,” Kean said.

So one of the key figures pushing for a weather-dependent grid appears not to have read, or does not understand, the future system plan he champions.

For his benefit we will return to Westerman: “What we know is that as we get to a net-zero system, it’s really expensive if we don’t have a dispatchable source like gas.”

Is it not just a tad disturbing that Kean’s views are so profoundly discordant with the analysis that underpins the system he is promoting? Again, for his benefit, his preferred grid does not work without gas. And, without gas, it will be even more expensive.

Kean also clearly has no knowledge of what’s happening in other countries attempting the same transition, unless he now believes that by subsidising gas the EU is “trying to stop renewables”.

It gets worse. Under questioning before a recent Senate estimates hearing, Kean repeatedly asserted that the system plan “is a look at the counterfactuals as to other sources of generation to provide the cheapest replacement cost of an existing system”.

This is wrong. Examining the cost of coal and nuclear power is explicitly prohibited because the plan is confined by the guardrails of every state and federal policy, including the 82 per cent renewable target. What is being built is not the cheapest system for consumers, it’s the “lowest-cost pathway”. They are two very different things, which is why Westerman will not follow his political masters’ lead in promising lower power prices.

The thought that those leading the net-zero charge might be clueless has clearly occurred to another inhabitant of the real world, Woodside chief executive Meg O’Neill.

“One of the things that I think has been challenging is we’re not using data to have the conversation,” O’Neill says.

“We’re using aspiration. We’re using goals. But the fundamental data that will help us understand what’s required to get to the place we want to be, that’s not been laid up for the Australian people.”

And how much back-up of gas, batteries and pumped hydro will be needed to support the so-called net-zero grid?

“What we’ve seen is that you need to manage those zero output hours from wind and solar,” Caravaggio says. “Unfortunately they always happen. So you need essentially a hundred per cent back-up for different periods to cover that need. That is an evolving challenge to figure out the economics and how to make that affordable. Right now, what we typically see is a significant gas build out.”

One hundred per cent backup.

So we are building two systems. The one being advertised and the shadow system needed to ensure the security of supply. And, in a profound irony, the crucial second system has been actively undermined by those championing the first.

In an electricity system, the term for a catastrophic event is cascading system failure. It begins with an initial fault which amplifies through the grid and ends in a widespread blackout. The lights can go out within a minute.

If the mob wakes up to the fact that what was promised by Bowen can never be delivered, or the lights go out, then Labor will learn what a cascading system failure looks like when it is applied to politics. It will put the lights out on the government in a heartbeat.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/inquirer/the-astonishing-cost-of-our-netzero-de...

Bowels and Keen - Gawd 'elp us.
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Re: Labors half trillion dollar lie on renewables plan
Reply #55 - Nov 24th, 2024 at 11:03am
 
...
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Re: Labors half trillion dollar lie on renewables plan
Reply #56 - Nov 24th, 2024 at 11:18am
 
Brian Ross wrote on Nov 24th, 2024 at 11:03am:

You didn't understand any of it.

It doesn't matter what the topic, it is way over your head.

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Re: Labors half trillion dollar lie on renewables plan
Reply #57 - Nov 24th, 2024 at 11:26am
 
Daves2017 wrote on Nov 23rd, 2024 at 1:38pm:
If I’m understanding this correctly our clean energy windmills are being brought from China because they are cheaper than locally built due to a tariff?


Not due to any tariff, there are none between Oz and China (, at least after the Morrison era trade kerfuffle ended).

As stated in the OP, Chinese windmills (and steel) are cheaper than anyone else's, because China, with its vast local market and advantage of scale,  subsidizes its industries  (which is why China  also has developed the world's most competitve EVs; Oz doesn't build cars anymore, so no fight with China over cars). 

Quote:
These same windmills steel is made from burning of Australian coal?


Yes. 

Quote:
Why do we supply other countries with our coal but we aren’t allowed to use it here?


(apart from the fact the Oz Labor govt is still allowing coal development in Oz, despite "not being allowed")

1. Because it's Oz's 2nd largest export earner.

2. The Paris agreement says the entire world must stop using coal.

So the Oz government is conflicted: how do we replace the lost export income?

3. In the meantine, Asia is still addicted to coal, even though China is now the world's largest producer of renewable energy; and yet China, being the 'world's factory', has a vast appetite for energy and is still building coal plants, so Oz is happy to oblige....

4. Fossil fuel companies are addicted to their massive profits from extracting fossil fuels, so are massively conflicted about transitioning to green - and governments are addicted to fossil royalties.

Hence the massive police intervention against climate protestors  trying to disrupt the world's largest coal exporting port - Newcastle.
......

So back to the lie: of course the globe has to spend well north of $100 trillion to transition to green (with or without nuclear, though some nuclear base-load is probably necessary); the question is: who will pay.

The dummies at COP-29 think the private sector will pay; they are dreamin'  because the private sector can make more money out of fossils than renewables....








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Re: Labors half trillion dollar lie on renewables plan
Reply #58 - Nov 24th, 2024 at 11:40am
 
Australia is confronted by three big changes in our strategic circumstances that are making our steady-as-you-go approaches to security and economic development untenable.

We face a markedly increased risk of war in the Indo-Pacific; the global economy is restructuring rapidly in adverse ways; and the Australian economy has stalled with essentially zero productivity growth, declining international competitiveness and a flight of much-needed investment.

If we ignore these fundamental changes in our circumstances we will see Australia reduced to a weak and vulnerable backwater state within a decade. We urgently need to recalibrate, develop a new vision for our future and launch serious reforms.

...

The second strategic challenge is the rapid restructuring of the global economy, driven by China dumping its vast manufacturing surpluses into global markets.

This, in turn, is triggering tariff and other emergency protective measures to be taken by the US, most of Europe, democratic Asia and increasing numbers of developing countries. The origins of this global economic crisis lie in the decision of the Clinton administration in the US to support China’s accession to the World Trade Organisation in 2001. At the time it was widely assumed that Beijing would abide by the WTO rules, its economic opening would lead to political liberalisation and China would become a “responsible international citizen”.

In joining the WTO, China promised to lower its tariffs, eliminate non-tariff barriers, protect the property rights of foreign investors and open its markets to American and other international producers. However, China kept very few of these promises. Instead, it heavily subsidised its own industries and used a wide range of other mercantilist practices to penetrate, and ultimately dominate, key foreign markets.

This has led to the widespread de-industrialisation of the US, Australia, Britain and most other developed economies. Entire industrial regions in the US and elsewhere have collapsed, and millions of people have lost their jobs. The strategic impact of this vast industrial transfer has been huge. In 2004, US manufacturing output was double that of China. But by 2020 Chinese manufacturing output was double that of the US. This industrial imbalance has grown worse during the past three years. When China’s economy failed to recover fully from the Covid disruptions, its housing sector contracted, consumption fell and many Chinese businesses stalled. This led Beijing to stimulate the economy in part by encouraging many manufacturers to continue expanding production capacity.

In several key product categories, including electric vehicles and solar panels, China has now built more production capacity than is needed to supply the entire globe. However, with domestic demand weak, the only way for many manufacturers to stay afloat has been to send their growing production surpluses into overseas markets at low prices.

This dumping of China’s manufacturing surpluses is considered intolerable by the US, most of Europe and many other countries. The tsunami of cheap Chinese products is destroying the strategic industries of many countries, undermining their economies and rendering them more vulnerable to any new economic or geo-strategic shocks.

Not surprisingly, a strong fightback is under way. Western investment into China is at its lowest level in 30 years. Many American and European companies are reducing their footprints in China and some are leaving entirely.

Tariff and other protective measures are proliferating. The US already has 50 per cent tariffs on Chinese semiconductors, solar cells and medical products. It also has 25 per cent tariffs on Chinese steel, aluminium and batteries, and 25-100 per cent tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles. Trump’s policy is to impose a 60 per cent tariff on all Chinese goods, with a possible 20 per cent additional tariff following.

Nearly all of Europe is introducing 27-48 per cent tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles, and 20-48 per cent tariffs on Chinese steel and other metals are being considered. Canada has imposed a 100 per cent tariff on Chinese electric vehicles and India has imposed 15-125 per cent tariffs on Chinese vehicles. India also has announced 30 per cent tariffs on most Chinese foods.

A rising number of developing countries also have joined the push back. Indonesia has imposed 200 per cent tariffs on Chinese textiles and other light manufactured goods, Turkey has introduced a 40 per cent tariff on Chinese electrical vehicles, and Brazil and Chile have announced tariffs on Chinese steel products.

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/inquirer/business-as-usual-on-china-will-ruin-u...
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Re: Labors half trillion dollar lie on renewables plan
Reply #59 - Nov 24th, 2024 at 11:52am
 
Frank wrote on Nov 24th, 2024 at 9:49am:
The astonishing cost of our net-zero delusion.

If any of them did understand the limitations of the technologies they champion, then all states building a wind and solar-dependent grid would have also vigorously pursued the development of domestic gas supplies.

As they raised their targets for more wind and solar, they would have raised their ambitions to secure plentiful gas. More supply would mean lower electricity costs and would have buttressed the grid, to allow for the orderly retirement of coal generation.


A couple of errors.

1. The current supply of gas is sufficient to ensure grid stability, in a scenario where the rollout of renewables is massively increased,   eg ten Suncable equivalents with UHV technology to transmit the electricty to where its needed.

And the massive midday excess (over Oz energy requirements) could be transmitted to Asia.

2. Massive subsidies of home batteries for rooftop solar, and VtoG EVs all interconnected would be a huge grid stabiliser.

Chris Uhlmann can't see past his navel.   

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