1 / 15

The state of play of renewables in Australia

The state of play of renewables in Australia. Simon Corbell Renewable Energy Advocate. Role of the Renewable Energy Advocate. Present and explain Victoria’s renewable energy policies. Advise government, industry and community.

fisseha
Télécharger la présentation

The state of play of renewables in Australia

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. The state of play of renewables in Australia Simon Corbell Renewable Energy Advocate

  2. Role of the Renewable Energy Advocate Present and explain Victoria’s renewable energy policies Advise government, industry andcommunity Meet with project developers to attract investment and remove barriers

  3. Transforming Victoria’s generation stock towards renewable energy Addressing barriers to distributed generation and storage Victoria’sRenewable EnergyRoadmap Supporting households and communities to invest in renewable energy Driving jobs and investment, particularly in regional Victoria Image source: flaticon.com www.delwp.vic.gov.au/energy Victoria’s Renewable Energy ActionPlan

  4. Renewable Energy Target (VRET) • 25% renewable by 2020 > up to 1,500MW • 40% renewable by 2025 > up to 5,400MW • Reverse Auction with contract for difference • Up to 11,000 jobs in construction • Up to $9 billion in new capital investment • Up to $2.5 billion in additional economic activity

  5. First steps on renewable energy development - Renewable Certificate Purchasing Initiative • Mt Gellibrand Wind Farm • - 66MW contracted to Victorian Government • - Additional 66 MW to be constructed leveraging long term contract • 30 MW Kiata Wind Farm • - Innovative community ownership model 100MW wind tender

  6. First steps on renewable energy development - Renewable Certificate Purchasing Initiative 75 MW Large Scale Solar Tender • including 35MW solar tram initiative • Under evaluation

  7. VRET Reverse Auction approach • Up to 1500 MW to be contracted by 2020 • Combination of technology neutral and dedicated solar auction • Long term Contract for Difference • Evaluation criteria to include economic development and community engagement / shared benefit outcomes. • Reverse Auction offers opportunity for further targeted outcomes if approved by government – eg: storage / off shore wind

  8. Critical role of state renewable energy auctions • State government contracts underpin investment in renewable energy projects in 2016-17 • 814MW contracted to State Governments • 1293MW contracted via long term retailer / corporate • 500MW no long term contract (19%) • Long term contracts will remain central to renewable energy development in Australia

  9. Source: AEMO Victorian Annual Planning Report June 2017

  10. 100MWh grid scale storage tender • Targeted to support weak distribution and transmission lines in Western Victoria ( Bendigo and Horsham lines) • 2 x 20 MW storage projects • Deployment by January 2018 • Funding $25 million • Important trial of grid scale storage in Australia • Inform future decision making on proposed Generator Reliability Obligations

  11. Pumped Hydro Feasibility Study • Investigating utilisation of mineshaft network in Bendigo for pumped hydro supported by solar generation. • Potential for 784kWh of generation • $150,000 from State and local government

  12. AEMO Projected electricity supply adequacy after the closure of Hazelwood (base case) Government Batteries includes the South Australian and Victorian battery storage initiatives. Emergency generation includes South Australia’s plan to operate 200 MW of diesel generation for summer 2017–18, replaced by 250 MW of GPG for summer 2018–19. Source: AEMO Energy Supply Outlook June 2017

  13. What needs to be done to secure a strong, reliable and sustainable supply of energy? • Stronger transmission planning • Generator reliability obligation • Demand side response • Long term price signal for new generation investment CET? VRET

  14. Reflect on this to discuss later today Will there be a power outage in Victoria thissummer, and if so, are renewables to blame?

  15. Thank you Office of the Renewable Energy Advocate PO Box 500 East Melbourne 8002 renewable.energyadvocate@delwp.vic.gov.au @SimonCorbell

More Related