26/02/2017

'Going Gangbusters': Solar Surge Has Only Just Begun And Batteries' Charge Close Behind

Fairfax - Peter Hannam

Solar energy's surge is only just getting started in Australia as utilities join the rush to a source of power that is now far cheaper than new coal plants, a report by the Climate Council finds.
The report also comes as the world's biggest supplier of batteries, Warren Buffett-backed China's BYD, marks out Australia as its second market to target consumers anxious to shield themselves from rising electricity prices.

Solar photovoltaic prices have fallen almost 60 per cent in five years and can now supply electricity as low as $78 per megawatt-hour for large-scale plants. That's close to half the cheapest levelised cost of ultra-super critical coal-fired power, the council report said, citing Bloomberg New Energy Finance data.
The cost of solar power is now below the retail prices of all Australian capital cities, with the exception of Canberra, the report says. The average small-scale solar system has a capacity of 5.4 kilowatts.
But while households have led Australia's take-up of solar PV so far, the next push will come from large-scale systems. There are more than 20 projects likely to reach financial close this year alone. (See chart below of 12 of them).
"It's really starting to take off," Andrew Stock, an energy industry veteran and author of the report, said. The current projects have more than 1 gigawatts of capacity, with a total of 3.7 gigawatts in the development pipeline.
"Solar is really going gangbusters globally," Mr Stock said, noting that new PV installations jumped almost 40 per cent to 73 GW in 2016 from the previous year. "These large solar plants can now produce electricity well, well under the costs of conventional [fossil fuel] thermal plants."

CSIRO builds solar partnership with China
The CSIRO will sign a technology licensing agreement with a Chinese solar company that could reap millions of dollars in royalties for the national science and industry organisation. Video of the solar research plant in Newcastle courtesy of CSIRO.


Solar can provide power when demand peaks, which is why EnergyAustralia, AGL and Origin are jumping into the market for utility-scale plants, he said.
While household panels have largely been pointed to face northwards in Australia to maximise midday generation, new large-scale plants are being built to track the sun's trajectory.
"Single-axis tracking will hold up better through to sunset," Mr Stock said.
During the recent record-breaking heatwave in NSW, large-scale solar supplied 132 MW of electricity at the 6pm (AEDT) peak of demand on February 10. Rooftop PV supplied an estimated 291 MW, the Australian Energy Market Operator said in a report released on Wednesday.
At that time, Tomago Aluminium, the largest electricity user in the state, was operating at a reduced load of about 580 MW, as the state struggled to avoid blackouts.
While Australia has world-class solar resources, other nations are so far achieving much lower prices for new solar projects. (See chart below.)
The Climate Council report blames a relative lack of experience in such projects but also higher financing and construction costs.

Whether 2017 can top last year in terms of worldwide solar installations remains unclear, with the Global Solar Council last month saying it expected a tough year before a recovery next year.
Big installers in China and the US were among those likely to curb construction this year.
Bloomberg New Energy Finance, though, predicts global PV will rise to 78.4 GW of new capacity this year and 88.3 GW next year, according to Jenny Chase, the group's head of solar analysis.
India will be among the nations expected to take up some of the market slack, with installations likely to more than double this year from 2016 to 9.4 GW, Ms Chase told Fairfax Media.

Australian appeal
BYD, which supplies about 12 per cent of global batteries though its electric car and utility storage businesses, is among the storage companies hoping to grab market share in Australia.
Buffett, the US billionaire investor, holds 10 per cent of the firm.
The company on Wednesday unveiled its range of batteries for households up to larger commercial users, with the smallest size with 2.5 kw-hour capacity likely to start from "under $3000", Julia Chen, a company spokeswoman told Fairfax Media.
BYD is hoping to target households that have lost generous feed-in tariffs that paid as much as 60¢ per KW-hour exported to the grid. Many will now be earning a tenth of that sum or less, and instead will be facing steeply higher electricity bills for any electricity they buy from utilities.
Australia is the second market after Germany that BYD has targeted. Demand for storage is expected to rise to 20,000 to 30,000 units this year, and BYD is aiming to grab 20 per cent of the market, Ms Chen said.
BYD estimates the market opportunity is about 200,000 households already with PV to add batteries as prices continue to fall. That number will swell as more homes add panels.
Technology gains are likely to see energy density levels for lithium batteries continue to fall for another two or three years. After that, cost gains are likely to be driven increasingly by scale savings and other improved manufacturing processes, Ms Chen said.

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Can Australia's Wicked Heat Wave Convince Climate Change Deniers?

Deutsche Welle

Sydney's sweltering recent record high of 47 degrees Celsius has brought the reality of climate change into sharp focus for many Australians. Skepticism in the country is waning - quickly enough?
Thousands of bats fell dead out of the trees as Sydney's parched suburbs reached their hottest temperature on record earlier this month: 47 degrees Celsius (117 degrees Fahrenheit) saw parts of the city receiving the dubious honor of being the hottest place on the planet that day.
That would be considered an unusually hot day, even in the Sahara Desert.
The city's human residents fled to beaches, shops sold out of fans and power cuts hit more than 40,000 homes in southern Australia after the electricity grid struggled to cope with air conditioning demand. A total of 87 fires raged across the state of New South Wales at the heat wave's peak in February.
For Australia, these heat waves are likely to only get worse. Although it is the developed country already most feeling the effects of climate change, heatwaves that are longer, hotter and more frequent are yet to come, according to a 2016 report from the Climate Council.
Professor David Karoly from the University of Melbourne told DW that in the best case scenario, if global greenhouse gas emissions are effectively curbed, Australia would be on course to experience heat waves five times as frequently by the end of this century compared with the latter part of the 20th century.
Sydney's citizens flocked to its beaches to cool down - those living farther inland didn't have that luxury
But if emissions remain high - which Professor Karoly pointed out as the current track in Australia and the rest of the world - then heat waves would increase in frequency by a factor of 10 by the end of this century in the country. Average heat wave temperatures would rise 3 degrees Celsius to an unbearable 50 degrees Celsius in some places, including Sydney.
For Professor Karoly, a member of the Climate Change Authority that advises the Australian government on climate change policies, global warming isn't some far-off scenario.
"It’s very clear: It's not just expected to worsen in the future, it's happening now," he told DW.

Skepticism down - but far from out
In a country revealed as having the highest rates of climate skepticism in the world - at the end of the list of 14 industrialized countries in a study published in 2015, showing nearly one in five Australians didn't believe climate change was happening - the blistering heat is bringing the realities of climate change to the fore. And with this, a seeming shift in attitudes.
Around 60 percent of Australians believe climate change is real and caused by human activity, a 6 percent rise since December 2016, according to a poll carried out by Essential Research and published this week.
The proportion of those believing we may just be witnessing a normal fluctuation in the earth's climate fell slightly, by 2 percent to a total of 25 percent over the same period.
An earlier, separate survey for the Climate Institute published in September 2016 put the proportion of Australians saying climate change is happening at 77 percent, up from 70 percent in 2015.
Adrian Enright, policy manager on climate change for WWF Australia, told DW he believes that Australians witnessing whatvthe devastating effects of higher temperatures are is helping turn the tide.
Following a series of smashed heat records, he told DW it's "not surprising that in a recent poll, we saw a jump in people associating global warming with human activities."
"The impacts of the recent heatwave, including off-the-scale bushfire risk warnings, have illustrated to Australians the sorts of risks we are being exposed to if we fail to curb carbon pollution," said Enright.
Sports fans tried to keep cool while watching tennis at the Sydney Olympic Park in January this year
"Climate change skepticism is overall declining, as both the scientific evidence and our first-hand experience of heatwaves and extreme weather events increases."
The devastating coral bleaching suffered by the Great Barrier Reef that reached its peak in 2016 "brought the reality of climate change home for many Australians," added Enright.

Lobbying fueling climate denial flame
But although climate change skepticism may be seeing a decline, Professor Karoly thinks it remains worryingly prevalent - thanks in no small part to a powerful fossil fuel lobby.
"In Australia 40 years ago, there was consensus on climate change," he told DW. "The conservative Australian government of the late 1980s and 1990s was committed to reducing greenhouse gas emissions."
But he said that as soon as there seemed to be serious government plans to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and reduce growth in fossil fuels, the coal industry and a number of media outlets effectively downplayed signs of climate change.
Stocking up on water to keep dehydration at bay during the deadly heat
Professor Karoly told DW that although heat waves have "had some impact on the population wanting strong action on climate change," this is "being combated by well-funded and well-organized campaigns that have led to a continuing apparent policy debate around what action on climate change is needed."

Australia's poor climate credentials
The current government, headed by the conservative Liberal Party and the rural-based National Party, revoked Australia's carbon trading scheme two years ago, Karoly pointed out.
"Since then, emissions have grown for two years, [although they had] fallen during the previous five years," he said.
Australia is the least-active country among the G20 when it comes to climate protection, according to a report by Climate Transparency in 2016, receiving the worst possible rating of "very poor" for its performance on overall climate policy. And Australians are feeling the repercussions.
Simon Bullock, senior campaigner on climate change at Friends of the Earth, told DW: "Ordinary Australians' health, agriculture and nature are all at increasing risk from drought, heat, flood and fires.
"Sadly, people are now seeing and experiencing climate change in their own lives. No amount of media misinformation from climate deniers can alter that."

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India’s Air Pollution Rivals China’s As World’s Deadliest

New York TimesGeeta Anand

Smog blanketed New Delhi in 2016. About 1.1 million people die prematurely in India every year from the effects of air pollution. Credit Roberto Schmidt/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
NEW DELHI — India’s rapidly worsening air pollution is causing about 1.1 million people to die prematurely each year and is now surpassing China’s as the deadliest in the world, a new study of global air pollution shows.
The number of premature deaths in China caused by dangerous air particles, known as PM2.5, has stabilized globally in recent years but has risen sharply in India, according to the report, issued jointly on Tuesday by the Health Effects Institute, a Boston research institute focused on the health impacts of air pollution, and the Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation, a population health research center in Seattle.
India has registered an alarming increase of nearly 50 percent in premature deaths from particulate matter between 1990 and 2015, the report says.
“You can almost think of this as the perfect storm for India,” said Michael Brauer, a professor of environment and health relationships at the University of British Columbia and an author of the study, in a telephone interview. He cited the confluence of rapid industrialization, population growth and an aging populace in India that is more susceptible to air pollution.
An Indian farmer walked through his field after burning his crops. A court has ruled that farmers can no longer burn their crops near New Delhi, but many still do. Credit Saurabh Das/Associated Press
Pollution levels are worsening in India as it tries to industrialize, but “the idea that policy making should be led by government is lacking,” Bhargav Krishna, manager for environmental health at the Public Health Foundation of India, a health policy research center in New Delhi, said in an interview.
As air pollution worsened in parts of the world, including South Asia, it improved in the United States and Europe, the report said, crediting policies to curb emissions, among other things. The report’s website that provides country-by-country data on pollution levels and the health and mortality effects.
Environmental regulations in the United States and actions by the European Commission have led to substantial progress in reducing fine particulate pollution since 1990, the report said. The United States has experienced a reduction of about 27 percent in the average annual exposure to fine particulate matter, with smaller declines in Europe. Yet, some 88,000 Americans and 258,000 Europeans still face increased risks of premature death because of particulate levels today, the report said.
A fraction of the width of a human hair, these particles can be released from vehicles, particularly those with diesel engines, and by industry, as well as from natural sources like dust. They enter the bloodstream through the lungs, worsening cardiac disease and increasing the risk of stroke and heart failure, in addition to causing severe respiratory problems, like asthma and pneumonia.
The report offers good news globally, in some ways.
Although deaths caused by air pollution grew to 4.2 million in 2015 from 3.5 million in 1990, the rate of increase of about 20 percent was slower than the rate of the population rise during that time. That’s because of improved health care in many parts of the world, as well as public policy initiatives undertaken in the United States, Europe and other regions that reduced emissions from industrialization, the authors of the study said in telephone interviews.
Villagers near a newly built state-owned coal fired power plant in southern China. Credit Kevin Frayer/Getty Images
China also offers an encouraging sign. Premature deaths from particulate matter each year have stabilized at around 1.1 million since 2005, the report said. Still, that is an increase of 17 percent since 1990, when it was a little more than 945,000.
The health effects of the ultrafine particles are still being studied and the full effects are only beginning to be understood, said Majid Ezzati, a global environmental health professor at the Imperial College, London.
“These studies are hard to do, and isolating the effects of air pollution is hard,” Dr. Ezzati said. “The numbers are still dynamic and nobody should claim an exact number of deaths is known.”
The Eiffel Tower seen through a haze of air pollution in Paris last month. The United States and Europe have made good progress in cutting fine particulate air pollution since 1990. Credit Philippe Wojazer/Reuters
But if he were an Indian citizen, he said, “I’d say, ‘Let’s not sit there and do nothing about it. Let’s not be exposed to it today as more research is being done.’”
Although few studies of the health problems brought by air pollution are based in India, Dr. Ezzati said, “it’s hard to imagine air pollution that is bad for people in London is not bad for people in India.”
Neither India’s environment minister nor its environment secretary could be reached for comment Monday evening.
Robert O’Keefe, vice president at the Health Effects Institute, said China’s trajectory on deaths from air pollution had stabilized as a result of the country’s efforts to reduce air pollution.
Emissions from the Kentucky Utilities Ghent Generating Station in Ghent, Ky., in 2014. Credit Luke Sharrett for The New York Times
India, on the other hand, had yet to undertake sustained public policy initiatives to reduce pollution, said Gopal Sankaranarayanan, an advocate at the Supreme Court of India who successfully petitioned it to ban licenses to sell fireworks in the New Delhi metropolitan area last year. Fireworks during the festival of Diwali contributed to hazardous levels of air pollution late last year.
Weak environmental regulation in India, he said, leaves India’s citizens with few alternatives other than to petition the courts to take action to protect the public’s health.
But the courts often lack the power or mechanisms to enforce their actions, he said. India’s environmental court, the National Green Tribunal, ordered farmers to stop burning their crops in the region around New Delhi in 2015, but the practice still continued last year. Smoke from the farm fires contributed about one quarter of the levels of the most dangerous air pollution in the Indian capital, environmental experts said.
“If you can’t enforce the directives of the courts — it becomes a problem,” Mr. Sankaranarayanan said. “We need practical solutions to save lives here in India.”

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