Antinuclear

Australian news, and some related international items

Just about a million small solar panel systems in Australia – top solar postcodes

solar-on-house956,000+ Small Solar Panel Systems In Australia http://www.energymatters.com.au/index.php?main_page=news_article&article_id=3587   12 Feb 13, 

The number of  small solar power systems installed in Australia has grown by more than 300,000 since the end of 2011.
Recently published data from the Clean Energy Regulator relating to systems installed under the Small-scale Renewable Energy Scheme shows the nation’s rooftops collectively host at least 956,193 solar panel arrays as at January 31 this year. At the end of 2011, there were 644,045 systems.

The true current installation figure is higher – Renewable Energy Target (RET) legislation allows a 12 month creation period for Small-scale Technology Certificates (STCs), so 2013 and 2012 figures will continue to rise due to this 12-month window.

The systems represent 2,308,026 kW of solar power capacity – enough to provide all the power needs for around 461,000 average Australian homes.

Australia’s top 20 solar PV postcodes and number of installations as at January 31, 2013: Continue reading

February 12, 2013 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, solar | Leave a comment

Indonesia solar power project being developed by Australian solar consortium

Australian solar consortium to develop 250 MW Indonesian project REM , 11 February 2013 SGI-Mitabu, a joint venture between The Solar Guys International and Mitabu Australia, is developing a 250 MW solar power project under an agreement with Indonesia’s Ministry of Energy. What’s more, it says it will finance the whole thing through reliance of a form of Islamic financing.

As reported by David Twomey of Econews Australia, the venture will launch a seven-year $100 million sukuk, or Islamic bond, later this year. That amount will be enough to finance the first, 50 MW stage of the project…….http://www.renewableenergymagazine.com/article/australian-solar-consortium-to-develop-250-mw-20130211

February 12, 2013 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, solar | Leave a comment

Western Australia’s opportunity to lead in renewable energy

Ludlam,-Scott-1Greens’ plan for clean power by 2029  http://www.watoday.com.au/wa-news/state-election-2013/greens-plan-for-clean-power-by-2029-20130210-2e6in.html#ixzz2KclQE7OS February 11, 2013  Robyn Preston Switching over to 100 per cent renewable energy by 2029 is not only achievable, it will save the average family money, according to Greens’ party leader Scott Ludham. WA Greens’ party leader Scott Ludham launched the Green Energy 2029 proposal on Sunday and said Western Australia cannot afford to wait decades to make the change to renewable energy sources.

The Greens say that with WA’s abundance of sunlight, wind and geothermal resources, changing to renewable energy over the next 16 years will not cost anymore than what has been proposed by the Liberal-National Government he said.

“The state government is actually proposing to spend a quarter of a billion dollars refurbishing the obselete Muja coal-fired power station and that for me is all you need to know about how wrong this government’s prorities are,” said Mr Ludham. Continue reading

February 11, 2013 Posted by | solar, Western Australia | Leave a comment

Senator Scott Ludlam explains Clean Energy Finance Corporation funding for solar thermal energy

“We have the technology, we have the institutional set-up and now we have the funding mechanism to make [concentrated solar thermal] plants like this a reality in Australia  largely in part because of the leadership shown by Senator Milne, by Adam Bandt and by our former leader, Senator Bob Brown, in bringing the Clean Energy Finance Corporation into being.

Barnaby Joyce’s renewables target: 100% ignorance REneweconomy, By    7 February 2013 “…….the most Ludlam,-Scott-1informed speech came from Ludlam (right) and it’s  worth a read. We won’t republish it in entirety, but here is a good excerpt. And here is a link.

“I think that many people, when they consider solar energy, think of rooftop solar panels. That is fine. We have seen huge falls in the cost of that technology as economies of scale kick in, particularly with the research and development leadership that Australia has shown over previous years, coupled with the massive manufacturing capacity of China. This has led to huge falls in the cost of PV. For example, in Perth—the latest figures I have from last September—218 megawatts of peak electricity was generated from the rooftops of the residents of Perth.

It is interesting to note that the largest renewable energy installation in Western Australia is actually the city of metropolitan Perth. Because costs have fallen so fast—with halting policy assistance from both federal and state that comes and goes; rebates that get slashed and reintroduced, different schemes that come and go solar-concentrated-PVand even so people have done the right thing—we are now seeing large-scale deployment of solar energy in Western Australia and right around the world. So, PV is a big deal.

“But, what we want to raise today—and the reason the motion is worded as it is—is that there are major changes occurring in concentrating solar thermal technology which does not use photovoltaics, it does not require the rare earth minerals, it does not require advanced electronics or miniaturisation or particularly advanced manufacturing technologies. Continue reading

February 8, 2013 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, solar | Leave a comment

World expert joins CSIRO push for thermal solar power

Aust-sun“Australia has one of the best solar resources in the world, Dr Blanco said.

“It is a natural fit for an international solar thermal research
collaboration to use this resource and our expertise to make solar
power the cheapest, cleanest energy source it can be. “We will reduce
the cost of solar thermal to just 12 cents a kilowatt hour by 2020 and
provide zero-emission energy to people when they need it. It’s a
technological leap but we will do it.”

World solar expert shines light on Australia Eco News, BY DAVID TWOMEY
· FEBRUARY 4, 2013 Australia’s leading science and research
organisation, CSIRO, has appointed world-renowned scientist Dr Manuel
J Blanco as Director of the Australian Solar Thermal Research
Initiative (ASTRI). Continue reading

February 4, 2013 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, solar | Leave a comment

Dramatic success of Perth Solar City Program

solar-rooftopPerth Solar City’s Stunning Success http://www.energymatters.com.au/index.php?main_page=news_article&article_id=3573 by Energy Matters, 31 Jan 13,  Over 16,000 households have participated in the Perth Solar City Program and collectively saved over a million dollars on their electricity bills last year.   The most comprehensive energy efficiency initiative in Western Australia, the Perth Solar City Program developed and implemented more than 30 energy efficiency and renewable energy projects within Perth’s Eastern Region.


The Program together with SunPower installed 673 residential solar panel systems at an average size of 2.30kW, for a total installed capacity of 1.56MW. Analysis shows the average solar household used 41% less electricity from the network, or 8.15kWh per day. Continue reading

January 31, 2013 Posted by | solar, Western Australia | Leave a comment

Solar photovoltaic plant for Mildura region, in Victoria

victoria-solarGreen light for solar farm near Koorlong http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-01-24/green-light-for-solar-farm-near-koorlong/4481736
Jan 24, 2013   A planning application has been approved for another solar farm in north-west Victoria.The Mildura council has given German company Belectric the nod to build a five-megawatt photovoltaic plant near Koorlong.

A similar project, Solar Systems’ 1.5-megawatt station, is also being built at Carwarp.

The Mildura Development Corporation’s Anne Mansell says it is an important project for the region.

“This is classed as medium scale, five megawatts is classed as medium scale,” she said.

“It’s still quite significant for the area, one thing I would add, it certainly complements the solar systems development at Carwarp and it shows we’re developing into a solar hub in this region.”

January 25, 2013 Posted by | solar, Victoria | Leave a comment

Mining companies turn to solar power, to cut costs

perhaps the most important news from an Australian perspective has been the move by mining companies to adopt solar technologies to reduce their dependence on fossil fuels, particularly diesel, and to keep a lid on their soaring energy costs.

The development of off-grid solar projects, particularly with remote and mining communities, is expected to be a central theme of the newly established Australian Renewable Energy Agency

a “huge opportunity” in the replacement of expensive diesel, both in remote and off-grid areas, and the fringe-of-grid areas

Aust-sunMiners embrace solar power – as a cost saving measure REneweconomy, By Giles Parkinson   18 January 2013  The New Year is barely more than two weeks old, and already solar is grabbing headlines: China has confirmed it expects to install 10GW of solar in 2013, a development that would take its total installed capacity close to 50GW by 2015, and well beyond the  most optimistic forecasts of 100GW by 2020 if the growth rate continues to expand.

Elsewhere, the Middle East expects to intall 3GW of solar by 2015, the state of New York has announced a$1.5 billion extension to its solar program, France doubled its solar targets to 1GW, India is about to tender 1GW of projects, Warren Buffett has invested another $2.5 billion in solar projects, Italy and Spain have set new solar generation records, and Germany increased its solar production by 45 per cent after adding another 7.3GW of capacity. Continue reading

January 18, 2013 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, solar | Leave a comment

Australia’s potential for concentrated thermal solar power

solar-SevilleAround 40% of Australian renewable energy could be generated by wind farms but the real key to success would be the enormous empty landscape of the interior with the high levels of solar power it receives.

An example of suitable technology is the Gemasolar power station in Spain which is a 19.9MW plant expected to generate 110 GWh per year. The plant’s molten storage tank allows for independent electrical generation for up to 15 hours. Although solar power in Australia could be produced from solar PV arrays on buildings, most of the country’s solar power could come from concentrated solar power (CSP) plants similar to that in Spain.

A 100% renewable energy grid could create at least 80,000 jobs during construction and 45,000 in operation. 30,000 jobs would also be created in manufacturing assuming half the plant was made in Australia itself.

Australia could be self-sufficient in renewable energy within 10 years http://www.renewableenergymagazine.com/article/australia-could-be-selfsufficient-in-renewable-energy-20130117 Robin Whitlock, 17 January 2013 A new report published by the Energy Research Institute of the University of Melbourne  finds that existing renewable energy could wean the country off fossil fuels

If Australia had the right social and political leadership it could drive forward deployment of solar and wind in order to achieve full self-sufficient renewable energy within 10 years the report states.  The programme, if implemented, could be an example to the whole world and enable to Australia to end its current reliance on fossil fuels completely.
Australia is currently the world’s largest exporter of coal and also has one of the highest global greenhouse gas emissions rates per capita. The country has, until fairly recently, been particularly obstinate in its resistance to tackling climate change. The University of Melbourne report says that with the right political will Australia’s enormous renewable potential could be harnessed within a decade, creating thousands of new jobs and making the country carbon neutral. Continue reading

January 18, 2013 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, solar | Leave a comment

Solar panel rating system for Australia

Australia To Have Its Own Solar Panel Rating System http://www.energymatters.com.au/index.php?main_page=news_article&article_id=3552, 16 Jan 13, 

The Clean Energy Council (CEC), Australian Solar Institute (ASI) and Australian Photovoltaic Association (APVA) have partnered to develop a climate-based solar panel performance and module rating system. Continue reading

January 17, 2013 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, solar | Leave a comment

In Western Australia it’s the battler households taking up solar panels

map-WA-solarBattler Households Driving Western Australia’s Solar Uptake  http://www.energymatters.com.au/index.php?main_page=news_article&article_id=3550  by Energy Matters, 15 Jan 13,  In Western Australia, like elsewhere in the nation, solar power uptake isn’t being driven by the rich, but by the mortgage belt.   Western Australia now boasts over 100,000 rooftop solar panel arrays across Perth and the South West.

According to The West Australian, figures provided by Synergy show the southern suburb of Canning Vale had highest number of solar panel installations (2239) as of December 19, followed by Thornlie (1513), Baldivis (1376), Willetton (1299) and Ellenbrook (1198).

None of Perth’s affluent suburbs featured in Synergy’s top 20 list of solar panel installations in Western Australia.

The results again bust the myth that solar rebates and subsidies have primarily benefited the wealthy. Western Australia’s experience has been repeated throughout the country.

In an analysis of solar energy systems installed under the Renewable Energy Target carried out last year by REC Agents Association (RAA); the Association found suburbs with the highest solar uptake were typically in the outer metropolitan mortgage belt.

The Clean Energy Council’s Solar Power Australia 2011-12 report states over half of solar households have an annual income of less that $100,000 annually and more than a quarter earn less than $65,000 a year.

Solar panel uptake is being driven primarily by ongoing and substantial electricity price rises.

According to solar provider Energy Matters, a 3kW solar power system installed in Perth will generate more than 12kWh a day on average. Based on the price of a good quality system supplied and installed by the company; the electricity produced will work out to cost under 6c per kilowatt hour over the life of the system – far cheaper than retail rates.

Households in Western Australia can also benefit from the state’s feed in tariff that pays 8 – 50c per kilowatt hour for surplus electricity exported to the mains grid, depending on location. Solar feed in tariff incentives are also available in other states; but with the price of electricity so expensive now the focus is increasingly on self-consumption.

January 15, 2013 Posted by | solar, Western Australia | Leave a comment

Kerang, Victoria, getting two solar farms in 2013

victoria-solarAnother 30 MW Solar Farm For Victoria http://www.energymatters.com.au/index.php?main_page=news_article&article_id=3530, 27 Dec 12Gannawarra Shire Council last week approved plans for another 30MW solar farm to be constructed near Kerang, Victoria. The latest 30MW PV solar project will be situated on 36 hectares south of the town and is expected to produce 52 gigawatt hours of clean electricity annually; enough to power 14,300 homes and avoid 62,000 tonnes of carbon emissions each year.

“Construction of the $38 million solar farm is expected to commence in mid 2013, with an expected construction timeframe of around 14 months. The project is likely to provide significant employment and service opportunities for Kerang,” Manager Economic Development Roger Griffiths said.

Gannawarra Shire Council Mayor Cr Neville Goulding said Council is actively encouraging utility scale renewables in the area.
“The development follows strategic work by Council’s Economic Development unit to facilitate and promote the option of large scale solar projects within the Shire, to Australian and overseas companies seeking to invest in the Australian green energy market. Council looks forward to further developments in the renewable energy sector.”

Albury based ECO for LIFE will be developing the project.

Another 30MW solar farm is already under construction in the Kerang region after being approved in August. The facility is being developed by AKK Consulting Group and is located off the Loddon Valley Highway, 4 kilometres south of the town centre.

Kerang is situated 279 kilometres north-west of Melbourne. In addition to substantial solar radiation resources, the town has access to a large capacity sub-station, a 220kV transmission line that runs from Bendigo to Broken Hill in NSW, two 66kV sub transmission lines running directly to Swan Hill and one 66kV sub transmission line to Cohuna.

December 26, 2012 Posted by | solar, Victoria | Leave a comment

Australian town powered by solar energy 1981 – 2004

sunHistoric Australian Solar Farm To Become A Museum http://www.energymatters.com.au/index.php?main_page=news_article&article_id=3526      25 Dec 12, Long before the solar power boom in Australia, the White Cliffs Solar Power Station was generating clean electricity for a town.

Located at White Cliffs, New South Wales, which had no grid connection at the time; it was constructed in 1981 by a team from Australian National University.

The solar farm originally featured fourteen three-metre parabolic dishes covered in thousands of mirrors and mounted on heliostatic mountings; which followed the sun throughout the day.  Continue reading

December 25, 2012 Posted by | history, New South Wales, solar | Leave a comment

Mixed reactions to Climate Change Authority’s Renewable Energy Target review report

Even given these major issues, Australia’s solar trade bodies have generally welcomed the final report; perhaps taking a “it could have been worse” approach – particularly given the coal lobby reportedly pushed to gut the Renewable Energy Target right up until the last possible moment.

Australia’s Solar Coaster To Continue? http://www.energymatters.com.au/index.php?main_page=news_article&article_id=3521  20 Dec 12, by Energy Matters It appears the spiel ‘the best time to buy solar is always now’ could remain true for prospective home solar power system purchasers in the time ahead.

As mentioned yesterday, the Climate Change Authority’s Renewable Energy Target review report contained recommendations for commercial and residential solar that if implemented will ensure a degree of uncertainty for the sector for years to come.

A gradual phase-out of the Small-scale Renewable Energy Scheme (SRES) and also what the CCA refers to as an “emergency brake”; whereby the level of subsidisation can be further reduced, have been suggested.

The suggested phase-out aspect wouldn’t kick in until 2017, but if Australia’s solar subsidy history has demonstrated anything, it’s that when tools are in place to remove support for small-scale solar, they are used – and often prematurely. Continue reading

December 20, 2012 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, solar | Leave a comment

Commercial solar power will further reduce Australia’s demand for fossil fuel electricty

solar-panels-and-moneyHot Tips For Australia In 2013 — Energy Storage, Big Solar, Clean Technica December 18, 2012 Giles Parkinson“…… Dr Saddler ( Hugh Saddler, principal consultant in the climate change business unit of Pitt & Sherry) said. “There’s also been a dramatic increase in residential use of small-scale reverse cycle air-conditioners, whichhave become very much more efficient in recent years.”
Using electricity demand in 2008-09 as the base, annual demand to the end of November 2012 has seen an 11 per cent fall in Victoria, 8 per cent in NSW, with smaller drops in other states.

“Changes in demand of electricity on this scale are unprecedented in the entire 120-year history of the electricity supply industry in Australia,” the Pitt & Sherry report said.

The rapid spread of solar photovoltaic panels is also beginning to erode demand, although the full impact may not be felt until more companies rather than homes install the technology, he said. Commercial power demand typically matches solar PV output more closely than residential use.
Solar boost
Meanwhile, one of Australia’s biggest PV installers, Mark Group, has begun offering additional solar payments to foster demand even as state governments roll back feed-in tariffs. Earlier this year, Victoria cut its feed-in tariff from 25¢ per
kilowatt-hour to 8¢. Mark Group, along with retailer Diamond Energy, has lifted that rate to 33¢, with plans to roll out similar programs in NSW, Queensland and South Australia next year.

A surge in Chinese PV production has seen the cost of panels drop from $1.80 to 65¢ per kilowatt capacity in the past two years. “We’re not that far from operating without subsidies,” Rob Grant, chief executive of Mark Group’s Australian operations, said. “The biggest uptake is going to commercial.” : http://www.smh.com.au/business/carbon-economy/emissions-sink-as-consumers-turn-off-coal-20121217-2bj3t.html#ixzz2FS0PZJzR

December 19, 2012 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, solar | Leave a comment