20/03/2017

How An Indigenous Renewable Energy Alliance Aims To Cut Power Costs And Disadvantage

The Guardian -

First Nations lobby group will support remote communities looking to make transition – and tackle climate change
The First Nations Renewable Energy Alliance will lobby government and partner with private enterprise and other community energy alliances to support Indigenous communities. Photograph: Calla Wahlquist for the Guardian
Like so many of the Indigenous communities dotted across the Australian continent, the remote communities in north-west New South Wales are struggling. "These are not happy places," says the Euahlayi elder Ghillar Michael Anderson.
Many of the 300 or so residents of Anderson's hometown of Goodooga rely on welfare, he says. Exorbitant electricity bills – up to $3,000 a quarter for some households – further exacerbate the poverty. "We're always at the end of the power line, so the service that is there is quite extraordinary in terms of cost."
Many other communities rely on expensive, emissions-intensive diesel-powered generators to meet their electricity demands. "It's a real problem and we need to make sure that we fix this," Anderson says.
To that end, Anderson and 24 other Indigenous leaders have formed the First Nations Renewable Energy Alliance, which aims to tackle high power costs and entrenched disadvantage – along with climate change – by pushing for renewable energy in Indigenous communities.
The alliance, formed at the Community Energy Congress in Melbourne last month, will lobby government and partner with private enterprise and other community energy alliances to support Indigenous communities looking to transition to renewable energy.
Anderson, who is a member of the alliance's seven-member steering committee, says the move is an important step towards self-sufficiency for Indigenous communities.
The renewable energy company 360 Energy Group, which is based in Melbourne, has stepped up with $10,000 and an offer of office space and knowhow to help get the alliance off the ground.
Its director, Michael Anthony, sees immense potential for renewables – such as solar or wind power generation combined with battery storage – to empower remote communities. Renewables, he says, can "provide communities with a really strong, consistent, stable power solution at about half the cost of [current] solutions".
Whereas high energy prices often drive Indigenous people off their traditional lands, lower-cost renewables can help communities to thrive no matter how remote.
"We can build a power station where the community exists," Anthony says, "so people are able to successfully live in the environment the way they want to live and have access to power which enables them to better determine their economic future."
Only a handful of Indigenous communities have embarked on renewable energy projects in Australia. The Indigenous-owned and -operated company AllGrid Energy, for instance, has installed solar panels and battery storage systems to replace diesel generators in the Aboriginal communities of Ngurrara and Kurnturlpara in the Northern Territory's Barkly Tableland. Within two months of the system being installed in May 2016, people were moving back to their homelands from Tennant Creek, the communities growing from just two permanent residents to about 40.
The Murrawarri elder Fred Hooper, also on the alliance steering committee, is hoping that Australian Indigenous communities can follow the lead of other Indigenous communities around the world. In Canada's First Nations communities, for instance, renewable energy projects are becoming commonplace. "It's very inspiring," he says.
Melina Laboucan-Massimo, from the Lubicon Cree First Nation in Alberta, Canada, has led the push for her own community of Little Buffalo – which lies at the heart of the Peace river oil sands – to adopt renewable energy after a 2011 oil spill just 10km from the township. A 20.8kW solar installation, built and operated by locals, now powers the community health centre. Additional projects are being planned to wean the community off the propane heating and coal-powered electricity that it relies on.
Laboucan-Massimo, who is a member of Canada's Indigenous Clean Energy Network, has seen the benefits that alliances can provide. "It's really important to share information," she says, "because, when you're dealing with companies, or utilities, it's really good to know what's being told to one community or what kind of deals are being offered."
The First Nations Renewable Energy Alliance will go one step further, working with community leaders and acting as a conduit between the communities and the businesses they are dealing with. This is essential, says Anderson, to avoid predatory practices they have seen in the past, with companies "playing on the psychology of poverty" to gain advantage.
The alliance has drafted protocols and memoranda of understanding that will guide how companies engage with Indigenous communities for renewable energy projects.
While lowering the cost of energy is a high priority for remote Indigenous communities, the environmental credentials of renewables are also an important consideration, says Hooper. "One of the best things about renewable energies is that it's relying on natural sun from the sky, wind that's blowing across the landscape and other renewable energies are not raping our mother earth of the precious resources that she holds," he says.
One of the next steps for the alliance will be to identify a community that can act as a test case for a renewables project. "Our experience is that if we can make it work for one community, it will work in every other community," Anderson says.

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Australia's Peak Business Lobby Calls For Emissions Intensity Scheme

The Guardian

The Business Council has joined Energy Networks Australia, Energy Australia, AGL, the Climate Change Authority, the National Farmers Federation and the CSIRO in calling for a carbon market mechanism. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP
The nation's peak business body has joined the growing calls for an emissions intensity scheme (EIS) and argued coal-fired power stations should give three years notice for closure in its submission to the chief scientist's electricity review.
Jennifer Westacott, the chief executive of the Business Council of Australia (BCA) also called for no further changes to the renewable energy target (RET), given it was the foundation significant investments. She also said there was no need for state-based targets.
Westacott, representing the biggest businesses in the country, argued that in the medium to long term, an EIS was both technology-neutral and would provide the policy signal currently missing to drive investment in energy.
"Australia's 2030 emissions target has been set," Westacott said. "What's missing is the signal that will support the investment needed for the electricity system.
"A signal such as an emissions intensity scheme for electricity is both fuel- and technology-neutral and preserves the broadest range of options to meet future emissions reduction targets.
"It also creates an incentive for investment in lower emissions generation technologies."
But she warned that if an EIS was imposed too quickly, it could lead to multiple closures in regional communities and place more pressure on energy security.
"Without access to competitively priced gas, an emissions intensity scheme could lead to multiple closures within one region in the short term, placing pressure on system security and regional communities all at once," Westacott said.
She said an emissions cap should be applied to coal-fired power stations to ensure they do not extend their operating lives.
"While less efficient than an emissions intensity scheme, the transition may be easier to manage and provide clearer signals for new investment in the electricity system in the short term," she said.
The BCA's submission is the latest to urge the chief scientist, Alan Finkel, to recommend an EIS for the energy sector, effectively imposing a carbon price. Other groups calling for an EIS or carbon market mechanism include Energy Networks Australia, retailer Energy Australia, electricity provider AGL, the Climate Change Authority, the National Farmers Federation and the CSIRO.
Energy policy remains front and centre for the federal government following Malcolm Turnbull's meeting with gas chiefs to address domestic shortages and his plan for a 50% expansion in the Snowy Hydro scheme.
Finkel is investigating the best way to provide security for the national electricity market at a time of rapid change in climate and technology.
After the energy and environment minister, Josh Frydenberg, openly canvassed an EIS as one of Finkel's options, conservatives in the Coalition party room including senior government minister Christopher Pyne objected vociferously. It led to Turnbull and Frydenberg dumping the scheme within days and was noted by the former Liberal senator Cory Bernardi as one of the last straws that drove him to establish his own party.
Notwithstanding the split, Finkel's preliminary report gave guarded support to an EIS 24 hours after the government ruled out the scheme.
The Coalition won the 2013 election on the back of Tony Abbott's anti-carbon tax policy and subsequently dismantled the carbon market system implemented by the Gillard government, with support from the Business Council.
On Thursday, Westacott said numerous modelling exercises had demonstrated an emissions intensity scheme for electricity would manage carbon abatement objectives at the least cost.
"An emissions intensity scheme provides a subsidy for less emissions-intensive generation with the cost of the scheme paid for by more emissions-intensive generators," Westacott said. "The net effect should be no increase in price for customers."
As the government prepares for the closure of the Hazelwood on March 31 with the loss of 1,000 jobs, Westacott said better market information was required to support the transition of the electricity sector, including three years' notice for power station closures.
"To enable effective system planning and support efficient decision making, the quality of market information could be improved by publishing aggregate fuel supplies for each region over a period of time," Westacott said.
"To support a managed transition of the electricity sector, a three-year notice period for the withdrawal of large generators and consumers could be considered. This would also give communities time to adjust.
"We also need stable policy frameworks with minimal government intervention in markets to support electricity investment. Policies that suddenly shift from one place to another or see governments entering markets risk jeopardising, or at the very least confusing, this investment."
As the Turnbull government continues to attack state renewable energy targets, Westacott backed the federal government by saying state based RETs were not necessary but urged the Coalition not to change the federal RET again.
"Although renewable energy targets are a source of market distortion, the RET has underpinned significant investments and it should be left alone," Westacott said.
"To make further changes would have a chilling impact on investment right across the sector. There is also no role for state-based renewable energy targets."
The BCA has argued the recommendations must ensure security of supply and restore community confidence in the national electricity market while creating conditions for energy investment to improve energy affordability.
It also recommends all energy options should be kept on the table, including nuclear power, coal, gas-fired generation and capture and storage. Finkel is expected to make recommendations within the next four months.

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February 2017 Was Second Warmest February On Record

NASA

February 2017 was the second warmest February in 137 years of modern record-keeping, according to a monthly analysis of global temperatures by scientists at NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) in New York.
Last month was 1.1 degrees Celsius warmer than the mean February temperature from 1951-1980. The two top February temperature anomalies have occurred during the past two years.
The GISTEMP monthly temperature anomalies superimposed on a 1980-2015 mean seasonal cycle. — View larger image
February 2016 was the hottest on record, at 1.3 degrees Celsius warmer than the February mean temperature. February 2017's temperature was 0.20 degrees Celsius cooler than February 2016.
The monthly analysis by the GISS team is assembled from publicly available data acquired by about 6,300 meteorological stations around the world, ship- and buoy-based instruments measuring sea surface temperature, and Antarctic research stations.
Global map of the February 2017 LOTI (land-ocean temperature index) anomaly shows that North America and Siberia were again much warmer than the 1951-1980 base period, and that Europe was relatively warm. — View larger image
The modern global temperature record begins around 1880 because previous observations didn't cover enough of the planet. Monthly analyses are sometimes updated when additional data becomes available, and the results are subject to change.

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