The new benchmarks were spotted by analyst Dylan McConnell from the Climate and Energy College, using the data from the OpenNEM resource.
They show a new record high share of renewables on Australia’s main grid for a weekday when the combined output of solar, wind and hydro reached 56.2 per cent just before 2pm on Thursday.
This is just short of the 57.1 per cent renewables share reached last Saturday, but the significance is that weekdays generally have higher demand as more industry is operating, so it’s a milestone worth recording.
Source: OpenNEM
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And the combined output of coal (both the really dirty brown coal generation and the dirty black coal generation) also fell to a new weekday low of 9,937MW, which McConnell notes is a full gigawatt lower than the previous nadir.
Source: OpenNEM
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They highlight the continuing and accelerating transition from highly polluting “baseload” fossil fuels to cleaner but variable renewable sources such as wind and solar.
The Australian Energy Market Operator has forecast that rooftop solar alone will be meeting up to 76 per cent of demand on Australia’s main grid within five years, which means that coal generators will have to learn to ramp production up or down, or switch off altogether.
Links
- Climate Energy College - University of Melbourne
- Open Platform for National Electricity Market Data (OpenNEM)
- Australian Energy Market Operator (AEMO)
- Renewables doing heavy lifting in National Electricity Market Clean
- Six ways to invest in renewable energy and support the fight against climate change
- Despite renewables surge Australian energy lags in the dirty dozen
- Regional voters reject gas led recovery, support investment in renewables
- We’re smart enough to solve climate challenge with technologies we already have
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