1 / 26

Australian Government Policy Drivers for Renewable Energy Development

Australian Government Policy Drivers for Renewable Energy Development. Presented by John Rooney Manager – Industry, Energy and Environmental Policy Section Industry and Small Business Policy Division Department of Innovation, Industry, Science and Research. 11 June 2010.

azizi
Télécharger la présentation

Australian Government Policy Drivers for Renewable Energy Development

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Australian Government Policy Drivers for Renewable Energy Development Presented by John Rooney Manager – Industry, Energy and Environmental Policy Section Industry and Small Business Policy Division Department of Innovation, Industry, Science and Research 11 June 2010

  2. The government’s approach • In June 2009 the government signed the OECD’s declaration on Green Growth • Mandates the development of a Green Growth Strategy intended to “achieve economic recovery and environmentally and socially sustainable economic growth” • Believes a Carbon Pollution Reduction System(CPRS) with a price on carbon is the cheapest and most effective way • Committed to bipartisan support so will not move to legislate until at least 2013 • Greenhouse gas reduction targets remain unchanged • Boosting investments in clean and renewable energy as well as energy efficiency

  3. Renewable Energy Target Department of Climate Change and Energy Efficiency • Designed to ensure 20% of our electricity supply comes from renewable sources by 2020 • Split into small-scale and large-scale • Small-scale renewable energy scheme – designed to deliver households, small business and community groups $40 for each Renewable Energy Certificate created by small-scale technologies • Large-scale renewable energy scheme – ensures the market for large-scale projects so they can grow free from uncertainty

  4. Renewable energy in Australia Source: AERA, 2010

  5. Role of the Department of Innovation, Industry, Science and Research • The government believes that the best approach is through innovation, research and development • DIISR participates in areas such as clean technology, enabling technology, green skills, ‘green’ research and development and eco-innovation • Australia is a leading innovator in renewable energy technology: CSIRO’s Energy Transformed Flagship • The challenge for Industry Policy is to ensure that more of these innovations are commercialised in Australia – to grow Australian Renewable Energy manufacturing Industries

  6. Energy Transformed FlagshipCSIRO • Responding to environmental and efficiency challenges facing the energy sector • Virtual Power Station • linking dispersed renewable energy generation and storage systems to create a single ‘virtual’ power station to feed into the electricity grid • Mini Grids • developing advanced control techniques for electricity networks allowing greater penetration of renewable and low emission energy • Second Generation Biofuels • developing second generation biofuels obtained from lignocellulose with a particular focus on conversion processes. • Solar Brayton Cycle demonstration field • world’s largest solar tower Brayton Cycle system • Ultrabattery • hybrid energy storage device made up of a supercapacitor integrated with a lead–acid battery cell provides a solution for future energy storage needs

  7. Renewable Energy Equity FundDepartment of Innovation, Industry, Science and Research • Provides venture capital and managerial advice to small, innovative renewable energy companies • Includes companies commercialising direct or enabling renewable energy technologies and services • Sources of renewable energy include sun, wind, geothermal sources, biomass not derived from fossil fuels, mini- or micro- hydro systems, waves, tides and the ocean

  8. R&D Tax Concession/CreditDepartment of Innovation, Industry, Science and Research • Encourages Australian industry to undertake R&D activities • Aims to increase international competitiveness by encouraging innovative products and services • From 2010-11 the R&D Tax concession will be simplified to the R&D Tax Credit • Provides a 45% refundable credit for firms with turnover of <$20million, 40% for firms >$20million

  9. Clean Business Australia Department of Innovation, Industry, Science and Research • Climate Ready Program • Competitive grants program • $50,000 to $5million on a matching fund basis • Supports early stage commercialisation activities to develop solutions to climate change challenges • Re-Tooling for Climate Change • Grants of $10,000 to $500,000, up to half the project cost • Helping manufacturers reduce their environmental footprint, improving energy or water efficiency • Green Building Fund • Grants of $50,000 to $500,000, up to half the project cost • Aims to reduce greenhouse emissions by reducing the energy consumed in operations of existing commercial office buildings

  10. Green Car Fund Department of Innovation, Industry, Science and Research • $1.1 billion fund • For projects that enhance the research and development and commercialisation of technologies that significantly reduce fuel consumption and/or greenhouse gas emissions • $1 government funding for $3 of private funding

  11. Transport Fuel GrantsDepartment of Innovation, Industry, Science and Research • Ethanol Production Grant • Eligibility-based to encourage the use of biofuels in transport • Producers are paid 38.143 cents per litre • Eligible ethanol must be made entirely in Australia from biomass feedstock • LPG Vehicle Scheme • Grants scheme for LPG conversion of a motor vehicle or purchase of a new vehicle fitted with LPG • Grant amount starts at $1,750 for conversions completed by 30 June 2010

  12. Clean Energy Innovation CentreDepartment of Innovation, Industry, Science and Research • Part of the Enterprise Connect Network • Eligible businesses receive a business review at no charge • Tailored Advisory Services Grants with $1 government funding for every $1 of eligible expenditure by the business • Eligible business may be involved in • Generation of renewable and low carbon energy sources • Solar hot water, desalination and water efficiency • Equipment and technologies to increase energy efficiency

  13. Further policies of the Department of Innovation, Industry, Science and Research • Clean Technology Supplier Advocates • provide leadership to Australian businesses that manufacture and produce environmentally-friendly technologies • Professor Andrew Parratt • Innovation Investment Fund • a venture capital program that supports new innovation funds and fund managers with expertise in early stage venture capital investing • Clean Tech Australia Fund Management Partnership in Sydney and OneVentures in Melbourne • Future Manufacturing Industry Innovation Council • leaders in innovation from business, the science and research communities, unions, professional associations and the Australian Government • focus is manufacturers using advanced processes, materials and technologies

  14. Clean Energy Trade and Investment StrategyAustrade • Connect Australia’s clean energy and technology sector with commercial opportunities • Contribute to industry development through trade and investment • Target markets with advanced technology and capital, especially North America, Western Europe and North East Asia • Export and outward investment will grow as domestic capability expands

  15. Renewable Energy Future FundDepartment of Climate Change and Energy Efficiency • On 11 May 2010 the government announced they will commit a further $652.5 million over four years to establish a Renewable Energy Future Fund • Brings total investments in renewable and clean energy and energy efficiency to over $10 billion • Delivered through a number of departments and agencies • Priorities and progress is coordinated through Department of Climate Change and Energy Efficiency

  16. Australian Centre for Renewable Energy (and associated support) Solar Flagships (and associated support) CCS Flagships (and associated support) Overall funding $2.4 billion $0.56 billion $1.6 billion Flagships: $2000 million NLECI: $400 million Flagships: $1,500 million Solar Institute: $100 million Components ACRE funding: $567 million

  17. Australian Centre for Renewable Energy (ACRE) Department of Resources, Energy and Tourism • Objectives: promote the development, commercialisation and deployment of renewable energy and enabling technologies to improve competitiveness in Australia • Central contact for the government • Focus on building on the research and development funded through other bodies

  18. ACRE’s Renewable Energy Demonstration Program Department of Resources, Energy and Tourism • MNGI Pty Ltd - $62.762 million • engineered geothermal system project, based on Petratherm's 'Heat Exchanger Within Insulator' model • will provide a sound foundation upon which to underpin the large-scale development geothermal energy • Geodynamics Limited - $90.000 million • demonstrate the potential for hot-rock geothermal energy to be a major generator of zero-emission, base-load power • world's first multi-well hot fractured rock power project • Victorian Wave Partners Pty Ltd - $66.465 million • first commercial scale ocean energy project in Australia • The Hydro-Electric Corporation (Hydro Tasmania) - $15.280 million • demonstrate the potential for enabling technologies to help integrate renewable technologies into established electricity networks and mini-grid systems in remote areas • integrate wind, solar and storage with a biodiesel generator to provide baseload and peak power for the King Island mini grid system

  19. ACRE’s Advanced Electricity Storage Technologies Program Department of Resources, Energy and Tourism • Wizard Power (ACT) • $7.4 million to demonstrate a solar energy storage system based on ammonia dissociation and reassociation into hydrogen and nitrogen • Lloyd Energy Systems (NSW) • $5 million to demonstrate a solar thermal energy storage system involving concentrated solar energy and graphite blocks • ZBB Technologies (NSW) • $3.1 million to demonstrate an integrated zinc-bromine flow battery at CSIRO’s National Solar Energy Centre in Newcastle • RedFlow Pty Ltd (QLD) • $1.113 million to demonstrate the viability of zinc bromine batteries in maximising on grid and fringe of grid solar photovoltaic systems • Smart Storage Pty Ltd trading as Ecoult (NSW) • $1.82 million to demonstrate an UltraBattery system located at the end of an 11 kV rural grid attached to a 660kW wind turbine at Hampton NSW

  20. ACRE’s Second Generation Biofuels Research and Development Department of Resources, Energy and Tourism • The University of Melbourne ($1.24 million) • biofuel from Micro algae involving the efficient separation, processing and utilisation of algal biomass • Algal Fuels Consortium ($2.724 million) • pilot-scale second generation biorefinery for sustainable micro algal biofuels and value added products • Curtin University of Technology ($2.5 million) • sustainable production of high quality second generation transport biofuels from Mallee biomass by pyrolysis and utilising the biorefinery concept • Bureau of Sugar Experiment Stations ($1.326 million) • an optimised and sustainable sugarcane biomass input system for the production of second generation biofuels • Monash University($1.383 million) • develop a pyrolysis biorefinery • Microbiogen Pty Ltd ($2.539 million) • produce commercial volumes of ethanol from bagasse using patented yeast strains • Licella Pty Ltd ($2.288 million) • commercial demonstration of Lignocellulosics to stable bio-crude

  21. Other programs of the Australian Centre for Renewable Energy • Geothermal Drilling Program Department of Resources, Energy and Tourism • $50million program provides assistance to develop geothermal energy projects, drilling geothermal wells • Seven firms were announced to receive funding in 2009 • Wind Energy Forecasting Capability Program Department of Resources, Energy and Tourism • $14million to support the development and installation of software and systems for effect forecasting on wind energy generation • Funding concluded on 30 June 2009, some work continues into 2010 • Developed the Australian Wind Energy Forecasting System

  22. Solar Flagships Program Department of Resources, Energy and Tourism • Solar photovoltaic • AGL Energy - a multi-site project using thin film cadmium telluride solar photovoltaic technology generating up to150MW • TRUenergy- single site using thin film cadmium telluride solar photovoltaic technology to generate up to 180MW • Infigen/Suntech - crystalline silicon solar photovoltaic technology would be deployed at up to three sites to generate up to 195MW • BPSolar - a single axis tracking photovoltaic system to generate 150MW from plants constructed at several locations • Solar thermal • ACCIONAEnergyOceania - generate 200MW using solar thermal parabolic trough technology at a single site • ParsonsBrinckerhoff - construct a 150MW solar thermal parabolic trough power station • WindProspectCWP - linear fresnel technology to construct a 250MW power plant • Transfield – convert a coal-fired power station into a 150MW solar thermal linear fresnel power plant

  23. Carbon Capture and Storage Flagships ProgramDepartment of Resources, Energy and Tourism • Wandoan power project located north-west of Brisbane, Queensland, an Integrated Gasification Combined Cycle (IGCC) coal fired power project. • ZeroGen project located west of Gladstone in Queensland; also an IGCC project. • Collie South West Hub located south of Perth in Western Australia in close proximity to the industrial centres of Kwinana and Collie and based around an integrated multi-user capture, transport and storage infrastructure project. • CarbonNet proposal in Victoria’s La Trobe valley, another integrated multi-user capture, transport and storage infrastructure project, with sources of CO2 from electricity generating plans in that area.

  24. Department of Innovation, Industry, Science and Research Industry House 10 Binara Street Canberra City, ACT 2607, Australia Telephone +61 2 6213 6000

More Related