News and Information about the Progress Towards a Sustainable Australian Future
Sunday, September 16, 2012
Sustainable Sydney Walking Tour - Australia Going Green
Get out and about green building style with the new Sustainable Sydney Walking Tour.
Co-developed by the Green Building Council of Australia (GBCA) and Better Buildings Partnership, the Sustainable Sydney Walking Tour is a self-guided, street-level exploration of some of Sydney’s greenest buildings.
Walk the city while learning how green buildings are contributing to the sustainability of the inner-city community and leading by green example in the design and construction of our built environment.
The walking tour takes approximately two hours if you choose to visit all six landmark Green Star buildings.
green australia, australia green
australia going green,
sustainable living,
Sustainable Sydney Walking Tour
Australia
Sydney NSW, Australia
Wednesday, September 5, 2012
Fotowatio Plans to Build Australia’s Largest Solar-Power Project
Fotowatio Renewable Ventures, the solar-power plant developer backed by U.S. energy investor Denham Capital Management LP, won the right to build a 20-megawatt project near Australia’s capital.
Fotowatio will participate in the Australian Capital Territory’s feed-in tariff program, which rewards generators of solar power by paying above-market prices for the electricity, Simon Corbell, ACT minister for the environment and sustainable development, said today in a statement.
The Royalla solar farm, to be built about 25 kilometers (16 miles) south of Canberra, will become the largest in Australia by 2014, according to the statement. The venture will help in an effort to lower carbon emissions and shift away from fossil fuels, the ACT government said.
Fotowatio, which is based in the Netherlands, sought a new project in Australia after losing a competition earlier this year for federal government funds to build a large-scale solar plant in New South Wales state. Denham Capital in March reached an agreement with Fotowatio to invest $190 million in solar projects in markets including Australia.
Saturday, September 1, 2012
Clean Energy With a Pinch of salt
A sodium-ion battery being developed in Australia is set to increase solar energy use and reduce our dependence on fossil fuels, according to researchers.
Although bulkier than commonly used lithium batteries, sodium-ion batteries will be cheaper, less toxic, and more environmentally friendly, said Manickam Minakshi, a chemistry and mineral scientist at Murdoch University, in Perth Australia.
“Our water-based sodium-ion battery has shown excellent potential for affordable, low-temperature storage,” he said.
Better batteries
Other batteries used for renewable energy storage – such as molten salt or molten sulphur – only work at high temperatures, making them expensive and impractical. Also, like lead-acid batteries, they are very corrosive and environmental pollutants, which aren't problems with sodium-ion batteries, said Minakshi.
The Murdoch team is now moving towards large-scale commercialisation, and the future could see these batteries connected to solar panels in every home. “This is a very exciting time,” said Minakshi.
The new sodium-ion battery has particular potential when coupled with the green power of solar energy. Widespread use of power from solar panels is limited because there are periods known as ‘non-generation’ times, when power cannot be produced. These include, for example, overcast weather or night-times.
Power in the dark
“Using solar energy panels to get power will only make sense when you can store the power when the Sun’s not shining,” said Stephen Thurgate, vice-president of program development partnerships at Sydney’s Macquarie University.
Murdoch’s new sodium-ion batteries could have applications in small networks with their own battery systems or ‘smart grids’ that use information and communication technology to reduce dependence on centralised power stations, said Thurgate.
While commonly used rechargeable lithium batteries have a higher voltage, making them more suitable for transport and vehicular power sources, they come with a lot of issues, said Minakshi.
Sodium: cheap and abundant
Lithium, for example, is more expensive and far less abundant than sodium in the Earth’s crust.
Another advantage of sodium-ion batteries is that they have a higher density, meaning they are able to store more energy for their weight. Combined with their low costs, they could open up affordable green energy to the developing world.
Lithium and sodium share similar chemical properties, but the sodium ion is 2.5 times the size of lithium, and a big challenge for the Murdoch researchers was finding a ‘host material’ for these large ions.
“Ions travel out of the cathode and into the anode to form a current,” said Minakshi. “As an imperfect analogy, you can think of them as mesh filters that ions pass through. We had to find materials with larger gaps in their mesh.”
Paving a path for alternative energy technology
Murdoch’s new development doesn’t spell the death of the lithium battery, which is still ideal for transportation because of its lighter weight, said Danielle Meyrick, deputy dean of the School of Chemical and Mathematical Sciences. “Sodium is slightly heavier and is much more suitable for stationary energy storage applications [such as] industry,” she said.
The sodium-ion technology could also enable the use of renewable energy in households, moving away from traditional energy generation sources.
“This kind of battery facilitates security of supply and continuity of electricity supply to households," said Meyrick. “It facilitates storage in times when there’s no sunlight, when there’s no wind, [and] when there’s no snow.”
Although there is more research to be done on finding the optimum scale of the battery and cell size, Thurgate said the findings were promising.
“The fact that [sodium-ion batteries are] based on readily available materials, that it’s an aqueous solvent [water-based] – so there’s no fear of the thing being flammable – [and] the fact the energy density is very high... are all great,” she said.
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
Government to Scrap Carbon Floor Price
After weeks of secretive talks between the Gillard government and the Greens, Climate Change Minister Greg Combet has announced Labor will scrap the planned $15 floor price on carbon permits in a major overhaul of the carbon pricing scheme.
Following intense lobbying from business and threats by the independent MP Rob Oakeshott to block the floor price, the government will ditch the mechanism and instead restrict the purchase of cheap overseas permits from developing countries.
A limit on the amount of United Nations-backed permits that Australian companies can buy will effectively prop up the price at home.
Mr Combet also announced plans to link Australia's scheme to Europe's emissions trading scheme from 2015, which is likely to have the effect of matching the two prices.
The link with Europe means that Australian companies can start buying European permits - which are now trading at $9.80 - right away to meet their future liabilities.
This could make the carbon price cheaper overall for Australian businesses, though the European price is likely to rise by the end of the decade as the European Union moves to make restrictions of its own.
Australian companies will only be able to meet 12.5 per cent of their liability under the Australian carbon scheme with the UN-backed permits.
And from 2018 - or possibly sooner - Australian companies will be able to sell credits in Europe. This could be a boon for farmers, who can generate credits through changes to their land practices, such as tree planting, though Mr Combet said that aspect was still to be negotiated.
The carbon price, which came in on July 1, will initially be fixed at $23 and will rise slightly over the next two years, when it becomes a floating-price emissions trading scheme.
Europe has the largest emissions trading scheme in the world. A linkage means that carbon permits can be traded back and forth between Australia and Europe. The idea is that the free market then finds the cheapest possible way to reduce carbon. From an environmental viewpoint, it does not matter where the carbon cuts are made.
The floor price was intended to create certainty for potential investors in clean energy. But businesses complained it would be an administrative headache.
Without a restriction of the UN-backed international permits, the Australian price could crash to as low as $3 or $4. The Greens have been concerned that a very low carbon price would not be enough to drive investment in cleaner energy such as wind, solar and wave power.
Today's announcement is also likely to have an effect on negotiations between Energy Minister Martin Ferguson and electricity generators who could be paid billions of dollars to phase out their dirtiest power plants.
The likely price of carbon over the next decade is one factor in deciding the value of these power plants. They may argue that scrapping the floor price raises the value of their assets.
The Greens have already backed the changes.
Independent MP Rob Oakeshott said this afternoon he would also support the legislation.
He said the announcement would protect Australia's emissions trading scheme from some ''very difficult decisions into the future''.
Opposition Leader Tony Abbott said the changes showed the government was all at sea on the carbon tax.
''You can't fix it. You've just got to scrap it,'' Mr Abbott told reporters in Rockhampton.
''We haven't had the carbon tax for two months yet and they've admitted there is a fundamental flaw at the heart of the carbon tax.''
Mr Abbott said there would be a ''huge hole'' in the budget as a result of the decision.
''If you can't take the price for granted, you can't take the revenue for granted, and if you can't take the revenue for granted, you can't rely on the compensation,'' he said.
However Mr Combet said the government would not reduce household assistance payments and tax cuts set up to compensate for the price impacts of the carbon tax.
Asked if he was contemplating any further changes Mr Combet said: ‘‘no’’.
''We will not be cutting any household assistance,'' he said.
''We committed to it and you might recall that there are further tax cuts that have been legislated from 2015 as well.''
Following intense lobbying from business and threats by the independent MP Rob Oakeshott to block the floor price, the government will ditch the mechanism and instead restrict the purchase of cheap overseas permits from developing countries.
A limit on the amount of United Nations-backed permits that Australian companies can buy will effectively prop up the price at home.
Climate Change Minister Greg Combet plans to scrap the $15 carbon floor price. Photo: Alex Ellinghausen
Mr Combet also announced plans to link Australia's scheme to Europe's emissions trading scheme from 2015, which is likely to have the effect of matching the two prices.
This could make the carbon price cheaper overall for Australian businesses, though the European price is likely to rise by the end of the decade as the European Union moves to make restrictions of its own.
Australian companies will only be able to meet 12.5 per cent of their liability under the Australian carbon scheme with the UN-backed permits.
And from 2018 - or possibly sooner - Australian companies will be able to sell credits in Europe. This could be a boon for farmers, who can generate credits through changes to their land practices, such as tree planting, though Mr Combet said that aspect was still to be negotiated.
The carbon price, which came in on July 1, will initially be fixed at $23 and will rise slightly over the next two years, when it becomes a floating-price emissions trading scheme.
Europe has the largest emissions trading scheme in the world. A linkage means that carbon permits can be traded back and forth between Australia and Europe. The idea is that the free market then finds the cheapest possible way to reduce carbon. From an environmental viewpoint, it does not matter where the carbon cuts are made.
The floor price was intended to create certainty for potential investors in clean energy. But businesses complained it would be an administrative headache.
Without a restriction of the UN-backed international permits, the Australian price could crash to as low as $3 or $4. The Greens have been concerned that a very low carbon price would not be enough to drive investment in cleaner energy such as wind, solar and wave power.
Today's announcement is also likely to have an effect on negotiations between Energy Minister Martin Ferguson and electricity generators who could be paid billions of dollars to phase out their dirtiest power plants.
The likely price of carbon over the next decade is one factor in deciding the value of these power plants. They may argue that scrapping the floor price raises the value of their assets.
The Greens have already backed the changes.
Independent MP Rob Oakeshott said this afternoon he would also support the legislation.
He said the announcement would protect Australia's emissions trading scheme from some ''very difficult decisions into the future''.
Opposition Leader Tony Abbott said the changes showed the government was all at sea on the carbon tax.
''You can't fix it. You've just got to scrap it,'' Mr Abbott told reporters in Rockhampton.
''We haven't had the carbon tax for two months yet and they've admitted there is a fundamental flaw at the heart of the carbon tax.''
Mr Abbott said there would be a ''huge hole'' in the budget as a result of the decision.
''If you can't take the price for granted, you can't take the revenue for granted, and if you can't take the revenue for granted, you can't rely on the compensation,'' he said.
However Mr Combet said the government would not reduce household assistance payments and tax cuts set up to compensate for the price impacts of the carbon tax.
Asked if he was contemplating any further changes Mr Combet said: ‘‘no’’.
''We will not be cutting any household assistance,'' he said.
''We committed to it and you might recall that there are further tax cuts that have been legislated from 2015 as well.''
Monday, August 20, 2012
Australians Led The World in Home Solar Installs in 2011
Australian households installed more residential rooftop solar power systems last year than any other nation.
Approximately 392,500 new home solar systems were activated in 2011 according to data from the Clean Energy Regulator and the International Energy Agency.
A fact sheet released by REC Agents Association (RAA) based on data from the Clean Energy Regulator states Australians had installed nearly 1.5 million solar hot water and solar panel systems to the end of June.
As at 30 June, 2012, renewable energy certificates had been created for 753,844 solar panel systems; representing 1,671,489 kW capacity. A further 743,842 heat pump and solar hot water systems had been installed.
Close to 18 per cent of all Australian families now has one or the other or both installed – 9 per cent of households have solar electricity generation systems.
“Recognition must go to the Howard Government for having the vision to establish a world leading Renewable Energy Target, to the Rudd Government for increasing that target four-fold and to the Gillard Government for delivering on the promise of the Renewable Energy Target,” says Ric Brazzale, President of RAA.
“Whilst four million Australians now have solar on their roofs, many more Australians are keen to get on board. The Renewable Energy Target must be maintained, expanded and extended over time to help deliver solar to all Australians.”
Some corners of industry have called for the scrapping of the Renewable Energy Target due to the introduction of a carbon price. However, last month, Australia’s Minister for Climate Change and Energy Efficiency Greg Combet stated this would “fail to deliver the transformation needed in our energy sector and only increase the cost of that transformation in later years.”
REC Agents Association represents businesses creating and trading inRenewable Energy Certificates (RECs); the mechanism behind Australia’s Renewable Energy Target and the basis of the Solar Credits Scheme. Often referred to as a solar rebate, Solar Credits is an initiative that subsidises solar panel systems.
Wednesday, June 27, 2012
Subsidy Cut Halts Solar Expansion
A SOLAR panel supplier has axed its plans to expand into Queensland after the government revealed it would slash the benefit for supplying power back into the grid - from 44¢ per kilowatt hour to 8¢.
Madison Australia's rethink came as industry lobby group Clean Energy Council argued the policy change could put thousands of jobs at risk, saying householders would reconsider the benefits of installing solar panels given the time taken to recoup their investment.
But Energy Minister Mark McArdle described the solar industry as viable, saying the scheme needed to be changed because all energy users were paying extra on their power bills to subsidise the feed-in tariff for solar panel owners.
Mr McArdle announced yesterday the feed-in tariff for providing power back to the grid would be cut to 8¢ per kilowatt hour, but anyone already in the Solar Bonus Scheme as of July 9 would continue to receive the 44¢ benefit.
Madison Australia director Yorath Briscoe said his Melbourne-based solar installation and retailing company was about to sign contracts in coming weeks to expand into the Gold Coast market.
He said the company had been planning to directly employ six staff in Queensland and contract up to 18 tradespeople, but the cut to the feed-in tariff would hit demand.
“There's going to be massive demand the next 10 days but after that there will be nothing,” he said, adding the company would no longer pursue the Queensland expansion plans.
“It's quite shocking that a government would pull the plug like this.”
The Clean Energy Council said under the current Queensland system, an average householder would break even on the initial investment after 4.5 years.
The average payback period would jump to about 10 years under one scenario modelled in research commissioned by the Clean Energy Council before yesterday's announcement.
But the cost of buying and installing solar panels was expected to progressively decrease in coming years so the break-even point could be less than 10 years for future customers, a council spokesman said.
Madison Australia's rethink came as industry lobby group Clean Energy Council argued the policy change could put thousands of jobs at risk, saying householders would reconsider the benefits of installing solar panels given the time taken to recoup their investment.
But Energy Minister Mark McArdle described the solar industry as viable, saying the scheme needed to be changed because all energy users were paying extra on their power bills to subsidise the feed-in tariff for solar panel owners.
Mr McArdle announced yesterday the feed-in tariff for providing power back to the grid would be cut to 8¢ per kilowatt hour, but anyone already in the Solar Bonus Scheme as of July 9 would continue to receive the 44¢ benefit.
Madison Australia director Yorath Briscoe said his Melbourne-based solar installation and retailing company was about to sign contracts in coming weeks to expand into the Gold Coast market.
He said the company had been planning to directly employ six staff in Queensland and contract up to 18 tradespeople, but the cut to the feed-in tariff would hit demand.
“There's going to be massive demand the next 10 days but after that there will be nothing,” he said, adding the company would no longer pursue the Queensland expansion plans.
“It's quite shocking that a government would pull the plug like this.”
The Clean Energy Council said under the current Queensland system, an average householder would break even on the initial investment after 4.5 years.
The average payback period would jump to about 10 years under one scenario modelled in research commissioned by the Clean Energy Council before yesterday's announcement.
But the cost of buying and installing solar panels was expected to progressively decrease in coming years so the break-even point could be less than 10 years for future customers, a council spokesman said.
Tuesday, June 26, 2012
Warning Issued Over Anti-Carbon Tax Posters
Labor is warning small businesses against displaying the Coalition's anti-carbon tax posters, saying they risk million-dollar fines if the information is found to be misleading.
The tactic is a further sign that both sides of politics are preparing to ramp up their campaigning efforts surrounding the tax.
Opposition Leader Tony Abbott told a meeting of Coalition MPs that he and other senior party figures would be campaigning "across the country", warning people the tax would push up the cost of living and threaten jobs.
Labor is also preparing a coordinated campaign this weekend to reassure the community about the effects of the tax.
Special Minister of State Gary Gray plans to visit the South Australian city of Whyalla on Sunday - a community Mr Abbott said would be "wiped off the map" because of the carbon pricing scheme.
Earlier today, Mr Abbott visited an RSPCA compound in Canberra to point out that "thousands" of charities would be worse off under the tax despite Government reassurances.
The head of the RSPCA in the ACT, Michael Linke, estimates the cost of the carbon tax will be somewhere between $5,000 and $10,000 per year for the local organisation.
"At this stage we're not expecting job losses here in Canberra," Mr Linke told reporters at Mr Abbott's media conference.
"There is absolutely no way that I'm going to compromise animal welfare, so we are going to have to shave costs in other areas."
The Government says more than $300 million is available to councils, community groups and charities to help offset the costs of the carbon tax.
Prime Minister Julia Gillard used Question Time to ridicule Mr Abbott's visit to the animal welfare charity.
"I can assure the Leader of the Opposition (that) on July 1, cats will still purr, dogs will still bark and the Australian economy will continue to get stronger," Ms Gillard told Parliament.
"Presumably tomorrow he will be out trying to scare Skippy the bush kangaroo, and the day after he'll be out trying to scare Puff the Magic Dragon, and so it will go on."
Posters
And Labor is also warning businesses to be "very, very careful" about being part of Mr Abbott's campaign by displaying posters in their shop fronts."Don't allow him to drag you into his cynical scare campaign because the consequences of that are very serious," Assistant Treasurer David Bradbury told Parliament.
"If you do mislead your customers, then you could face fines of up to $1.1 million."
But the Coalition has rejected suggestions their small business posters are misleading.
"The fliers do nothing more than explain the Government own modelling and policy," Opposition small business spokesman Bruce Billson said.
"This is just another example of the Gillard Government trying to intimidate small business to not pass on or talk about the impact of the carbon tax."
The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission has set up a hotline for members of the public to make complaints about misleading carbon tax claims.
Firms 'Less Prepared' For Low-Carbon World
Just days before Labor's pollution price takes effect, a new survey suggests Australian firms are feeling less prepared now for a low-carbon future than they were 12 months ago.
The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) report, released on Tuesday, also finds only a third of respondents believe the opportunities created by imposing a carbon tax will outweigh the risks in the long term.
That's down from about 50 per cent in the inaugural survey in 2011.
The report says executives may have been overconfident before the details of Labor's scheme were announced in mid-2011.
Global uncertainty may also be behind the shift in sentiment, coupled with the fact that "corporate nervousness on the eve of the introduction of the carbon pricing scheme is bound to be at its peak".
But the Gillard government can take heart from other key findings.
About 85 per cent of directly affected businesses and two-thirds of all companies are already acting to reduce pollution.
"These findings indicate Australia's carbon pricing legislation has spurred firms to take action to reduce their carbon emissions," the report, commissioned by GE, states.
"This will ultimately reduce the country's overall carbon footprint."
GE ecomagination director Ben Waters is encouraged by the fact carbon pricing is already driving energy efficiency.
"We've been in the realm of opinion and policy advice but now we've got a law that's about to start," he told AAP.
"It's about getting into action, which is what business does best."
Almost three-quarters of the 136 senior executives surveyed by the EIU believe carbon pricing is here to stay - although almost half think a better regime will eventually replace Labor's current proposal.
That's partly because two-thirds believe the $23-a-tonne starting price is too high.
"It is likely that Australia, which is just about to take its first steps towards carbon pricing, will have to go through several years of discussion and trading before reaching equilibrium," the report states.
The Gillard government's carbon tax will transform into an emissions trading scheme in mid-2015.
The EIU analysis also suggests the corporate carbon agenda has shifted towards "cost reduction" in 2012.
Of the 300 biggest emitters that will pay the tax from July 1, more than half have set up dedicated roles or teams to identify greater carbon or energy efficiency measures internally.
The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) report, released on Tuesday, also finds only a third of respondents believe the opportunities created by imposing a carbon tax will outweigh the risks in the long term.
That's down from about 50 per cent in the inaugural survey in 2011.
The report says executives may have been overconfident before the details of Labor's scheme were announced in mid-2011.
Global uncertainty may also be behind the shift in sentiment, coupled with the fact that "corporate nervousness on the eve of the introduction of the carbon pricing scheme is bound to be at its peak".
But the Gillard government can take heart from other key findings.
About 85 per cent of directly affected businesses and two-thirds of all companies are already acting to reduce pollution.
"These findings indicate Australia's carbon pricing legislation has spurred firms to take action to reduce their carbon emissions," the report, commissioned by GE, states.
"This will ultimately reduce the country's overall carbon footprint."
GE ecomagination director Ben Waters is encouraged by the fact carbon pricing is already driving energy efficiency.
"We've been in the realm of opinion and policy advice but now we've got a law that's about to start," he told AAP.
"It's about getting into action, which is what business does best."
Almost three-quarters of the 136 senior executives surveyed by the EIU believe carbon pricing is here to stay - although almost half think a better regime will eventually replace Labor's current proposal.
That's partly because two-thirds believe the $23-a-tonne starting price is too high.
"It is likely that Australia, which is just about to take its first steps towards carbon pricing, will have to go through several years of discussion and trading before reaching equilibrium," the report states.
The Gillard government's carbon tax will transform into an emissions trading scheme in mid-2015.
The EIU analysis also suggests the corporate carbon agenda has shifted towards "cost reduction" in 2012.
Of the 300 biggest emitters that will pay the tax from July 1, more than half have set up dedicated roles or teams to identify greater carbon or energy efficiency measures internally.
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Harvey Norman Invests in Solar Panels
RETAILER Harvey Norman plans to be a market leader in the domestic solar industry after placing a substantial order for user-friendly solar panels.
United States-based Westinghouse said today it had received an order for five megawatts of its Solar Instant Connect solar panel systems from Harvey Norman.
The order represents a significant investment in the green technology, which will result in Westinghouse's shipments in 2012 more than doubling from 2011.
Harvey Norman said the uptake of solar energy in Australia was stronger than in most other parts of the world, with over 830 megawatts sold in the local market in 2011.
"With Australian power pricing continuing to rise, we are continuing to see very strong demand for solar installations," Harvey Norman commercial division franchisee Alan Stephenson said in a statement.
"In addition to supplying kitchen, bathroom items, hot water and air conditioning systems, we have established a solar business, which we believe will be a market leader."
The newly ordered solar panels require Australian certification, and the first shipments to Harvey Norman are expected to begin in late-2012, Westinghouse said.
Solar Australia: Harvey Norman Invests in Solar Panels
Sunday, May 6, 2012
The End of Clean Energy Subsidies?
The federal government has given generously to the clean energy industry over the last few years, funneling billions of dollars in grants, loans and tax breaks to renewable power sources like wind and solar, biofuels and electric vehicles. “Clean tech” has been good in return.
The End of Clean Energy Subsidies?
During the recession, it was one of the few sectors to add jobs. Costs of wind turbines and solar cells have fallen over the last five years, electricity from renewables has more than doubled, construction is under way on the country’s first new nuclear power plant in decades. And the United States remains an important player in the global clean energy market.
Yet this productive relationship is in peril, mainly because federal funding is about to drop off a cliff and the Republican wrecking crew in the House remains generally hostile to programs that threaten the hegemony of the oil and gas interests. The clean energy incentives provided by President Obama’s 2009 stimulus bill are coming to an end, while other longer-standing subsidies are expiring.
If nothing changes, clean energy funding will drop from a peak of $44.3 billion in 2009 to $16 billion this year and $11 billion in 2014 — a 75 percent decline.
This alarming news is contained in a new report from experts at the Brookings Institution, the World Resources Institute and the Breakthrough Institute. It is a timely effort to attach real numbers to an increasingly politicized debate over energy subsidies. While Mr. Obama is busily defending subsidies, the Republicans have used the costly market failure of one solar panel company, Solyndra, to indict the entire federal effort to encourage nascent technologies.
The Republican assault obscures real successes that simply would not have been possible without government help. Wind power is a case in point. By spurring innovation and growth, a federal production tax credit for wind amounting to 2.2 cents per kilowatt-hour has brought the cost of electricity from wind power to a point where it is broadly competitive with natural gas, sustaining 75,000 jobs in manufacturing, installation and maintenance.
But the tax credit is scheduled to expire at the end of this year, with potentially disastrous results: a 75 percent reduction in new investment and a significant drop in jobs. That is just about what happened the last time the credit was allowed to lapse, at the end of 2003.
This is clearly the wrong time to step away from subsidies. But it may be the right time, the report says, to institute reforms, both to make the programs more effective and to make them more salable to budget hawks. One excellent proposal is to make the subsidies long term (ending the present boom or bust cycles) but rejigger them to reward lower costs and better performance.
The idea is not to prop up clean tech industries forever. It is to get them to a point where they can stand on their own — an old-fashioned notion that, one would hope, might appeal even to House Republicans.
The End of Clean Energy Subsidies?
Friday, April 6, 2012
Origin to Develop Cleaner Electricity for City of Sydney
Origin Energy Limited today announced an agreement with the City of Sydney which will see it lead the development of low-carbon, cost efficient trigeneration precincts across central Sydney, contributing to a cleaner energy supply for Australia's largest city.
Under the terms of the Heads of Agreement, Origin's wholly owned subsidiary Cogent Energy, will invest $ 100 million over a 10 year period to build trigeneration precincts in four zones across central Sydney.
Trigeneration involves using natural gas-powered engines to generate on-site electricity. It is a highly efficient process, as the waste heat from the engine is captured and re-used to provide heating, or for conversion to chilled water for cooling through an absorption chiller. Using gas as the fuel source offers the potential for a significant reduction in carbon emissions.
Origin General Manager Retail Markets, Mr Jim Galvin said, 'Origin is committed to meeting customers' energy needs today, and investing in the energy solutions for tomorrow. This means finding and developing new energy solutions which can provide Australians with a cleaner, reliable and affordable supply of energy.
'Working in partnership with large organizations like the City of Sydney, Origin is actively installing smarter technology including trigeneration systems, which use energy more efficiently, reduce carbon emissions and also deliver economic benefits to customers.
'As a leader in the installation of trigeneration in Australia, Origin is already demonstrating these savings with customers. In 2011, Origin worked with Investa Property Group to develop Australia's first open commercial trigeneration precinct in Sydney. Origin is also building a groundbreaking trigeneration precinct in Melbourne,' Mr Galvin said.
Trigeneration is a compelling, alternative energy solution that helps lower carbon emissions and network demand, while increasing energy efficiency and power security and reducing costs for large energy users, for example commercial buildings.
Trigeneration solutions offers owners of commercial buildings the opportunity to attain high standards of energy efficiency. Commercial buildings account for approximately 10 per cent of Australia's greenhouse gas emissions, according to Climateworks' Low Carbon Growth Plan for Australia. The success of this initiative and the proliferation of similar initiatives in Australia's central business districts could help drive material reductions in greenhouse gas emissions.
Precincts and customers for the first stage of the trigeneration project are currently being negotiated, including City of Sydney's own sites. It is expected that the plants will be constructed from 2013, as customers are identified and secured. Origin will be responsible for the ongoing operation and maintenance of the plants.
Origin to Develop Cleaner Electricity for City of Sydney
Saturday, February 11, 2012
Clean-Tech's Surge Masking Troubled Times
SOMETHING very unusual has been happening in the Australia sharemarket. In each of the past three months and for the last quarter as a whole, Australian clean-tech stocks have outperformed the broader index by a ratio of about two to one.
Over the last three months, the CleanTech index has enjoyed a gain of 5.5 per cent, compared with a 1.9 per cent loss in the broader index.
Clean-Tech's Surge Masking Troubled Times
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
Realities of Scale Cast Doubts on Gillard’s Carbon Tax and Clean, Green Future
Viewed from a practical background as an electronics trouble-shooter, it seems to me that the Gillard Government’s “clean energy future” is just a document of hope and uncertainty with a glossy cover.
Overblown expectations of wind and solar power sit at the heart of its plans, and it doesn’t take an Einstein to spot the exaggerated claims and glaring errors of scale.
The Gillard Government would have you believe that it is very simple. “Big Polluters”—500 of them—are to be “supertaxed” creating a simple cost incentive to reduce CO2 emissions.
In Victoria, the Latrobe Valley‘s coal-fired electricity generators can do little to change their ways. Paying the tax is their only real option, and consumer tariffs will rise accordingly. Low income households are to be compensated, emissions will stay the same, and nothing will be gained, except some tax revenue for government coffers.
Many people seem to be under the delusion that this carbon tax will fund the replacement of dirty coal with clean, green power. They assume that the much hyped “clean energy future” sold by Gillard and Brown has it all worked out and under control: the “big polluters” are to pay, and any additional costs to consumers will be minimal. A little research into the detail and the realities of scale uncovers the hidden jumbo amongst the glib tossings of our wry-smiling government.
Consider the situation in Victoria.
Any attempt to supply the state’s peak electricity demand of about 10,000 MW from wind and solar will cost tens of billions of dollars, a cost that will inevitably be passed on to consumers. A current submission to the Victorian Government with cost estimate for our wind-powered future offers a clue to the direction some would have us take, the scale of expenditure involved and what it will do to the industries on its hit list. It is available here.
Cost is only part of the problem. The other, bigger issues are those of scale and nature itself, which, in my opinion, also fail to add up.
Averaged over a month or so, a typical 90-metre diameter wind turbine in Victoria, rated at 2MW, generates only about 30 per cent of its 2MW rating, about 0.6MW, due to wind variability. This is known as capacity factor. Capacity factors of some Australian turbines are listed here.
Ten thousand such turbines would be needed to supplant the 6000MW output of the Latrobe Valley’s coal fired plant on a day of average wind speed. Latest figures from the US Department of Energy list the average “overnight” construction cost of wind generators in the US at US$2438 per kW. (See Table 2, line 26 wind, available here.)
On these figures 2MW turbines would cost US$4.87 million each. Ten thousand of same, for Victoria alone, would cost the Australian taxpayer $US 48.7 billion, though economies of scale would no doubt reduce that figure somewhat.
Ignoring secondary technicalities, such as environmental impact, the enormous costs and electrical losses incurred in lengthy transmission lines, made necessary by wind power’s need for “geographical dispersion” a hypothetical string of ten thousand 90-metre diameter turbines, spaced 100 metres apart in the prime location, along the Victorian coast, would stretch all the way from South Australia to the NSW border.
Even then there is no guarantee that large, slow-moving weather systems would not sometimes create circumstances where supply couldn’t meet demand for periods of hours, perhaps days. Nature will always have the final say in matching supply to demand, and we will be the ones who must make the alternate arrangements.
Full baseload back up from other sources will always be required if outages are to be avoided. Who wants to get stuck in a lift, or walk home, when public transport grinds to an untimely halt due to catastrophic load-shedding?
There are also lessons available from the experience of others, which should serve as a warning to our decision makers. (See ‘A problem with wind’ and ‘Wind power failing to deliver the energy Scotland needs’.)
Wind turbines provide a clean, but costly and intermittent adjunct to baseload power, they are not the answer for cities full of industry, mass transport, factories, with shopping centres, street lighting, and millions of power-dependant consumers. Many, it seems, are pinning their hopes on wind power, but promoting it beyond its capabilities can only lead to very expensive failure.
So where will our 24-7 baseload power come from?
Solar-thermal with storage is the other green answer we hear a lot about in latte-land.
In the sunny desert climes of Spain and the US, solar/storage plants certainly can produce power from stored heat even after sunset, but output fizzles after 12-16 hours. We could no doubt draw intermittent power from a source such as this, but not without full baseload back-up for all those days/weeks of cloudy weather we live with in southern Australia.
Once again realities and matters of scale spoil the fairytale. The total construction cost of a solar/storage plant such as the 110MW Crescent Dunes project in Nevada, is estimated at US$1billion, or about US$9.1 million per MW.
To replace the Latrobe Valley’s 6000MW coal-fired installation with this technology would call for 54 such plants at US$1 billion each, a total of US $54 billion. Scaled up from Crescent Dunes, a 6000MW complex would cover 392 sq kilometers and need unfailing sunshine, often a rare commodity in southern Australia.
Maintenance, including maintaining peak reflectivity of some 900,000 computer controlled heliotats (mirrors) permanently exposed to the elements, would very likely present formidable practical problems.
Back in the real world, southern Victoria’s July sunshine averages 3 hours per day and is sometimes zero for days. Our remote desert areas fare better, but not well enough for the standard of reliability required. Long distance transmission once again becomes a limiting factor.
Put kindly, our green energy future is positive thinking on steroids. The technological miracles upon which it is predicated, are not on the cusp of discovery as many believe. They are already here, and they are inherently problematical. No amount of taxpayer-funded research into wind and sunshine will tame the natural perversity of nature, which condemns the exploitation of its elements to accessory status, regardless of well intentioned hopes and dreams
A baseload capability virtually equal to peak demand is still necessary if power outages and chaos are to be avoided at all hours, and in all weathers. Having ruled out the nuclear option, burning gas instead of coal remains the only 24-7 generating option for Victoria’s largely urbanized population. If we really do have more gas than common sense, we just need a large pipe, a generating site or two, and a willingness to pay at least double for a ‘bandaid’ solution.
Compared to “renewables” construction of gas-fired power stations is relatively inexpensive, typically about $1.2million per MW, though “carbon capture” now on the horizon, may eventually add significantly to that cost. The cost of a typical plant can be seen on fact sheet A.
Even the Greens don’t dispute Victoria’s peak power need of 10,000MW. While the Latrobe Valley can supply 6000MW, Snowy Mountains hydro. and other sources can be imported into the mix to meet the occasional 10,000 MW demand.
A 10,000 MW gas-fired plant would be required to cover Victoria’s needs, at a bare bones cost of around $12 billion. Added to this is a long list of ancillaries, which are difficult to quantify, these include pipelines, distribution terminals, transmission towers, access roads, switching yards, land acquisitions, environmental management, legal costs maintenance, price blow-outs, and of course some “showcase renewables” The final outcome would most likely include all three, wind solar and gas, and the price – enormous.
There will be a scramble for dwindling funds from Canberra’s carbon tax fund, extracted from the 500 big polluters, but this revenue stream has been predicted by many to last about as long as their taxi ride to the airport.
One thing seems certain. If big green power gets its way, the taxpayer/consumer will end up with the bill, regardless of whether he/she voted to receive it. It is hard to see how multi-billion dollar projects such as these can be funded without huge increases in energy tariffs, which are likely to soar by two or three hundred percent to service the vast capital costs.
Measured out by ‘smart’ meters, the future price of electricity may depend literally on the price of gas, the time of day, and the weather forecast .
If anyone believes that Victoria’s share of the carbon tax extracted from a mere 500 targeted businesses will deliver us all nice green power at “little extra cost” they’d believe that little green pigs can fly. To believe it, you’d need to disregard the realities of scale, the limits of technology, the huge capital costs, and switch off any remnants of human intelligence.
But lots of people just swallow it whole … just ask around, it’s a worry!
Realities of Scale Cast Doubts on Gillard’s Carbon Tax and Clean, Green Future
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