Showing posts with label solar news australia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label solar news australia. Show all posts

Sunday, May 17, 2015

Australian Households Chase Sun to Lead World on Solar Adoption

Australian Households Chase Sun to Lead World on Solar Adoption
Australian households are world leaders in solar power installation, according to new figures from Australia's peak industry body representing the fossil fuel and renewable energy sector.

The Energy Supply Association of Australia, representing the fossil fuel and renewable energy sector, has sourced data from around the world revealing household solar photovoltaic (PV) penetration in Australia is way out in front of any other nation.

The report shows almost 15 per cent of Australian households have adopted the technology to power their homes.

This is more than triple that of Germans, who are second on the world stage and typically thought of as the most prolific solar adopters.

The report breaks the data down to countries and jurisdictions illustrating where the world's most enthusiastic installers of small-scale solar energy are located.

"Germany, the US, Spain and others are held up as being at the forefront of solar power, but it is Australia, where households have taken it upon themselves to install solar PV, that easily lead the world when it comes to solar penetration," the ESAA report states.

The ACT had 15,637 household installations as of September last year, according to ActewAGL figures. Based on 2011 census data this put the ACT at about 10 per cent of households connected to solar – South Australia leads the way with almost 25 per cent of households connected to solar PV.

Although Australia leads the charge on small-scale installations, Germany is out front with utility-scale solar installations.

In terms of total solar energy produced per million people, Germany's capacity is about triple that of Australia's.

Australian Solar Council chief executive John Grimes said that was due to policies that had focused on domestic solar systems.

"The economics are compelling," Mr Grimes said. "The cost of the technology continues to fall at such a rate that it is already much cheaper to install solar than it is to buy electricity from the grid. And with the advent of cheap energy storage technology – battery technology – that really closes the loop.

"People like the Energy Supply Association and others should rightly be thinking about this. If they don't start to embrace the technology as opposed to resist it, their members companies – the big utilities – are set to become the Kodaks of the future."

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Australia's 'Vast' Solar Resources Closer to Being Tapped In a Big Way


Australia’s largest solar plant moves one step closer to completion with the first of 1.35 million solar photovoltaic (PV) modules being installed on Wednesday at AGL’s Nyngan Solar plant in central NSW.

Located on a 250-hectare site about 550 km north-west of Sydney, the $290 million plant will have a capacity of 102 megawatts, or enough to power about 33,000 homes.

The plant is expected to be completed by next July and generate an estimated $137 million for the regional economy over its 30-year life span, said Scott Thomas, AGL’s general manager power development.

“AGL has already invested over $3 billion in renewable energy generation in Australia and with projects like the Nyngan Solar Plant, (it) is increasing the proportion of zero-carbon emission generation in the National Electricity Market,” Mr Thomas said.
The Baird government has lately stepped up public support for the renewable energy industry, placing it at odds with Coalition counterparts at the state and federal level.

Last week, Environment Minister Rob Stokes called for NSW to be “Australia’s answer to California” in promoting solar and wind energy, and also backed leaving the national renewable energy target – now being reviewed for a possible cut by an Abbott-government appointed panel – at current settings.

AGL’s Nyngan plant and a sister 53-megawatt solar project in Broken Hill will cost about $440 million to build, including $166.7 million in grants from the Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA) and $64.9 million from NSW coffers.
For Nyngan alone, the cost will be $290 million, with ARENA’s funds totalling $116.1 million and $43.3 million from NSW.

“The NSW government’s support for this project has been vital and a very important role in the widespread development of utility scale solar across NSW and across Australia,” Leslie Williams, Parliamentary Secretary for Renewable Energy, said.

“NSW has vast solar resources and has long been a standout leader in photovoltaic research,” Ms Williams said. “We are now taking the next step and becoming a standout leader in renewable energy development.”
Laid out end to end, Nyngan’s PV panels would stretch about 1600 km, or roughly the distance from Sydney to Melbourne and back.

The twin solar plants may be among the last large-scale renewable plants to be developed for some time as on-going investor concern about the future of the Renewable Energy Target (RET) has all but frozen new spending in the sector in Australia.
Just $40 million was invested in the first half of 2014 – the lowest since 2001 – and a fraction of the almost $2.7 billion poured into large-scale renewable energy in 2013, Bloomberg New Energy Finance reported earlier this month.

Small-scale renewable energy has seen a less precipitous decline although cuts in feed-in tariffs and other support have seen PV installations slide from 60,114 systems in the first quarter of 2013 to 45,369 in the three months to June 2014, according to the Australian Solar Council.

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.

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Huge Solar Project in Limbo as Newman Pulls Funding

The first chance to test whether solar thermal energy can provide large-scale alternative power in Australia may be in doubt under the new LNP state government.

The incoming Queensland government wants to pull out of an agreement formed by its predecessor to provide $75 million towards the $1.2 billion Solar Dawn solar research and power plant at Chinchilla, west of Toowoomba, Premier Campbell Newman said yesterday.

The Solar Dawn project is set to be one of the largest of its kind in the world.

Mr Newman said following the first LNP party room meeting the cost of the federal government's looming carbon tax would affect the state economy and public sector, and said Queensland would be “paying twice” if state-based climate change initiatives were not dumped.

However he said the green programs set to be axed under his government could be revived if the carbon tax was scrapped.

Mr Newman said during the state election campaign he wanted to dismantle Queensland’s carbon reduction schemes to save $270 million for the state budget.

Solar Dawn is a 250 megawatt solar thermal project using sun-heated water in tubes to produce steam-driven energy, and is backed by the federal government and was supported by former Premier Anna Bligh.

It is part of the federal government’s Solar Flagship Program. A similar project at Moree, in New South Wales, has received federal funding under the same program.

The University of Queensland has developed a $60 million research project to link to Solar Dawn.

UQ's Professor Paul Meredith, the head of the university’s renewable energy research, said he was worried the LNP’s decision would damage what he thought was a worthwhile project and one that provided almost 400 jobs.

‘‘Hypothetically if the state contibution of $75 million does not flow that leaves a very big hole in the project’s funding,’’ Professor Meredith said.

‘‘And I think it is anybody’s guess what the Federal Government will do at that point.’’

The Gillard Government has promised $475 million and the Bligh Government agreed in February this year to give $75 million in a ‘‘conditional agreement’’ to help build the huge solar thermal plant, which is scheduled to be operating by December 2015.

The project must reach ‘‘financial close’’ by June 30 this year.

Federal Energy Minister Martin Ferguson, speaking in Queensland yesterday, said he was surprised the new state government was considering backing out of Solar Dawn.

‘‘As the ’Sunshine State’, Queensland is well-suited for a significant solar thermal project able to competitively deliver electricity to the grid,’’ Mr Ferguson said.

‘‘Given the new Premier’s focus on jobs and training, it is worth noting the Solar Dawn project brings with it an average of 300 jobs during the three-year construction phase, with a peak of 450 jobs.’’

Mr Newman has an election promise to reduce Queensland’s unemployment to four per cent in six years.

‘‘If the new Queensland Government chose to breach the existing financial commitment to the Solar Dawn project, the Australian Government would need to consider its own position,’’ Mr Ferguson said.

The other main funding for Solar Dawn is coming from two joint venture partners: AREVA Solar and Wind Prospect CWP.

Solar Dawn project director Anthony Wiseman said his organisation had received no advice from the incoming Newman government that it would not provide the money.

‘‘Solar Dawn has not been notified of any change of intentions of the Queensland Government under the terms of the existing conditional agreement and we continue to work with relevant parties on developing our proposed project,’’ his statement read.

Solar Dawn would not answer what impact the removal of the $75 million in state government funds would have on the project.

Mr Newman said the LNP would examine any contractual commitments entered into by the previous government, but would not “in some silly way” scrap the contract if the cost outweighed the savings.

“If we can exit this project and save $75 million we will,” Mr Newman said yesterday.

Mr Newman has said the Queensland Government was contributing to projects that should federally funded.