Renewables are catching up in a country where coal is still king.
Sheep graze in front of wind turbines on Lake George on the outskirts of Canberra, Australia. Photo: David Gray (Getty Images) |
According to an analyst at Rystad Energy, who shared the figures with clean energy site Renew Economy, three of Australia’s six states saw new records for wind and solar power production.
In total, utility-scale wind and solar produced 3,628 gigawatt hours of power across Australia, a new record.
A full quarter of that power came from New South Wales, where wind and solar generated 995 gigawatt hours of energy. But there were standouts outside of NSW, as several wind farms saw great figures in what’s known as capacity output, or the percentage of time a power plant is actually used.
That capacity rate makes Badgingarra, as well as five other wind farms that hit capacity rates of more than 50% in January, competitive with most of the country’s coal units. (In November 2019, Badgingarra’s capacity output was 70%, its best month.)
Wind’s wins are a big deal, because in Australia, coal is definitely still king. Coal-fired power plants still generate about 60% of Australia’s electricity, making it an outlier as other comparatively wealthy countries race to ditch coal and diversify their grids with wind, solar, and other renewables.
The UK’s History Is Disappearing With Its Peatlands
|
Coal has some powerful allies in the country, including conservative media mogul and native Australian Rupert Murdoch, whose various news products, including Fox News, have gone all-in on climate denial.
A Greenpeace analysis released in 2020 revealed that Murdoch’s News Corp drove a “misinformation” campaign during that year’s devastating wildfires in Australia, spreading climate denial and sowing doubt about the wildfires’ causes as the government approved new coal extraction projects.
Extreme Weather Events Cost the U.S. $145 Billion in 2021
|
Prime Minister Scott Morrison procrastinated all the way up to the beginning of last year’s UN climate meeting to issue a net-zero plan for the country. (That plan still keeps coal and gas significantly in the mix, so it’s pretty dubious.)
Australia isn’t the only place where dirty fuels are celebrated even as clean fuels are performing well. A month after Texas Republicans used the February 2021 blackouts to bash wind energy, wind was the number one source of electricity on the Texas grid last March.
Links
- Renewable energy records blown away in January as wind farms match coal output
- Capacity Factor – A Measure of Reliability
- Badgingarra Wind Farm
- Applying geoscience to Australia's most important challenges
- The Staffer Who Called Out News Corp's Climate Change Coverage In A Reply-All Email Doesn't Regret A Thing
- Australia Pledges ‘Net Zero’ Emissions by 2050. Its Plan Makes That Hard to Believe.
No comments :
Post a Comment