Sydney Morning Herald - Peter Hannam
Australia’s greenhouse gas emissions extended their declines into the first
three months of 2021, driven lower by a roaring renewable energy sector that
set fresh records during this past windy weekend.
According to independent consultants Ndevr, modelling shows national emissions totalled 119.77 million tonnes of carbon
dioxide-equivalent (MT CO2-e) in the March quarter. That was 2.9 million
tonnes lower than the previous three months, and 7.5 million tonnes – or
almost 6 per cent – down from a year earlier.
Blowing up a storm: record levels of wind energy generation this
week in Australia. The rise of renewables is delivering the bulk of
emissions reductions in Australia.
Credit: Dominic Lorrimer
|
The increase alone shaved off 1.4 MT CO-e from the nation’s emissions tally, with the total now below 40 MT CO-e, or about a third of the total.
“Renewables are the big driver,” Matt Drum, Ndevr’s managing director, said. “Transport also dropped off, and remains relatively low because of COVID”, especially the aviation sector.
Increasing renewable generation and reducing electricity emissions Source: Ndevr Environmental |
EmissionsAustralian emissions fall again |
Large polluters, such as Orica, are showing signs of “serious investment” in
large-scale emissions reduction activity that should nudge that sector lower
too. “It’s not just noise and fluff. We’re starting to see it on the ground,”
Mr Drum said.
Australia’s emissions trajectory is likely to come in for closer scrutiny
ahead of the global climate summit planned for Glasgow in November.
The Morrison government has so far resisted signing up to a goal of
carbon neutrality – where any greenhouse emissions are nullified by offsets
elsewhere – by 2050.
Australia will also likely come under pressure to raise
its near-term ambition of cutting 2005-level pollution by 26-28 per cent by
2030.
Electricity emissions decrease while transport and stationary emissions trend upwards |
Source: Ndevr Environmental |
The struggling coal-fired power sector, beset by problems such as an explosion at a plant in Queensland in May and more recent floods in Victoria’s Latrobe Valley, should also extend the slide in emissions from the power sector, Mr Drum said.
In another sign of renewables’ advance, wind energy smashed generation records three times in less than a week, according to Dylan McConnell, an energy expert at the University of Melbourne.
Last Tuesday, wind farms generated 5.899 gigawatts for the NEM, a record that endured until Saturday evening when generation exceeded 6GW for the first time, climbing to 6.12GW.
That peak, though, lasted barely 24 hours, with wind turbines notching a fresh record of 6.428GW at 8.05pm (AEST) on Sunday evening.
All-up renewables were providing about 14GW of power to the NEM during Sunday, meeting more than half the demand. “[It’s] not quite a record, but getting close,” Dr McConnell said.Renewable Energy cracked 14GW a couple of hours ago too ... pic.twitter.com/unntxxewtz
— Dylan McConnell (@dylanjmcconnell) July 25, 2021
That power came in handy after Alinta’s Loy Yang B tripped on Saturday night, temporarily knocking 580-megawatts of capacity out.
The renewables sector, meanwhile, will launch on Monday its first national campaign to draw attention to its expansion with an eye to the next federal election.
Photovoltaic modules ready to be installed at a solar farm on
the outskirts of Gunnedah in northern NSW.
Credit: Bloomberg |
Future Power What's a 'just transition' and can you switch to green energy without sacking coal workers? |
“We know most Australians support renewable energy, but the climate debate has meant that a minority of loud voices have misled the public, resulting in some Australians feeling uncertain about a future powered by clean energy,” Kane Thornton, chief executive of the Clean Energy Council, said.
“This campaign is about ensuring all Australians are certain about the facts and feel part of the exciting transition already taking place.”
Links
- “No more yeah, buts”: Renewable ad campaign to combat myths and misinformation
- Japan revises 2030 targets, plans to double renewables and cut fossil fuels
- Australia’s largest gas and coal export partner slashes demand
- 2 in 3 coal jobs are destined for the scrap heap, a new report suggests, as the energy transition becomes inevitable
- Unions call for more offshore wind support
- Fossil fuel subsidies labelled ‘reckless’ as renewables hit new highs
- Government credit agency gave 80 times more money to fossil fuels than renewables over last 11 years
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