Antinuclear

Australian news, and some related international items

Fossil fuels just a back up for wind and solar energy? http://reneweconomy.com.au/2012/fossil-fuels-just-a-back-up-for-wind-and-solar-energy-67271  By Giles Parkinson  18 October 2012 The head of one of the world’s largest wind turbine manufacturers has expressed his surprise at the public debate around health concerns over wind energy in Australia, saying it does not happen elsewhere.

Andreas Nauen, the managing director of REpower Systems, which has
built or contracted to build around 1,000MW of wind turbines in
Australia, recently completed a visit to the country and was surprised
to hear that the claimed health impacts of wind energy was given such
prominence.

Doesn’t this happen elsewhere in the world?

“No. A blunt no,” Nauen told RenewEconomy in an interview (The full
details of which can be read here). “I am always surprised – I have
been to Australia a number of times, and every time this comes up
(and) I think to myself ‘hmmm, the only country in the world where
this gets discussed’.

“You have in other countries very specific discussions about things
like warning lights for high towers. It’s always a very solution
orientated discussion, if it comes up at all, but this fundamental
discussion of wind turbines causing illnesses, I don’t see it anywhere
else in the world.

RenewEconomy suggested that part of the reason may be the different
ownership for onshore wind farms in Europe, where community ownership
is more prominent. (Only two out of Australia’s 1,000 or so wind
turbines are owned by local community groups).

“If there was a serious issue with health, people would not trade that
off (for ownership),” he said. During his visit to Australia, Nauen
argued forcefully for the Renewable Energy Target to be retained as a
fixed goal of 41,000GWh, noting the rapid change of energy systems
around the world. He said Australia needed such policies to maintain
its momentum of investment.

Nauen said even conservative organisations such as the International
Energy Agency were pushing for a “revolution” in the way we use and
supply energy, and this was occurring in Germany, where the push to
replace nuclear and invest heavily in renewables meant that fossil
fuels in the future would be used “sparingly” as a back up for wind
and solar energy and other renewables.

Despite obvious resistance to such ideas, Nauen said that the biggest
energy companies in Europe were now coming around to that type of
thinking.

“In most countries you go through a phase of resistance, but I think
in most places in the world we have overcome this,” he said. “And now
it is down to the fact that most large companies have their renewable
divisions that drives that investment just like they do their
traditional generation business.”

He said this was true for Germany’s biggest generation companies, E.ON
and RWE (who incidentally have said they have no plans to build new
fossil fuel generation), and was also taking hold in other countries.

However, despite the need to act on climate change, Nauen said it
would ultimately be commercial realities and economics that decided
energy investment.

“Giving priority to renewables is a good start, but in the long run we
have to build the competitiveness of wind turbines,” he said. “So this
whole debate about who comes first and who gets priority simply gets
overcome by a simply commercial discussion about who generates
electricity in the most efficient and competitive way.”

See full interview here, also covering future costs, turbine size and
the outlook for the Australian market.
http://reneweconomy.com.au/2012/fossil-fuels-just-a-back-up-for-wind-and-solar-energy-67271

October 18, 2012 - Posted by | General News

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