• In short: A meltdown in the NSW electricity market has prompted warnings that Australia’s energy transition is off course.
  • Sustained extraordinary costs earlier in the month forced the market operator to step in and cap prices in NSW.
  • What’s next? A huge NSW coal plant will be kept online longer but there are worries about a shortage of new capacity.
  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    1 month ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    During a week in which NSW agreed to extend the life of the state’s biggest coal plant, Alinta boss Jeff Dimery cited dramatic events in the market earlier in the month to argue the system was in distress.

    One of the affected plants was the giant Eraring power station, which the Minns government this week announced would be kept open until 2027, two years later than planned by its private owners, Origin Energy.

    Paul McArdle from market analysis firm Global Roam said the coal outages coincided with relatively calm conditions, which meant output from wind farms was lower than normal.

    Mr Dimery, speaking at an oil and gas industry conference in Perth this week, said the intervention by AEMO was a portent of the disruptions to come if Australia failed to properly handle the switch away from fossil fuels and towards renewable energy.

    The Origin chief said the volume of gas that would need to be burnt for electricity in Australia would continue to fall in future as more and more renewable energy was added to the system.

    News that the NSW government would keep Eraring alive for longer drew mixed reactions this week, with workers and energy users celebrating the announcement.


    The original article contains 1,075 words, the summary contains 201 words. Saved 81%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • TheHolm
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    1 month ago

    And they still do not want go nuclear, without base generation power grid will takes decades to transition out of coal. We do not have that time.

      • TheHolm
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        1 month ago

        Did I say that it is impossible? It is possible but take way too long and will cost too much. Not to mention huge environmental cost of renewables comparing to nuclear.

        • Taleya
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          29 days ago

          They’ve had literal decades to get their arses into gear, tough shit if they backed themselves into a ‘costly’ corner

    • notgold
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      1 month ago

      Thank Greenpeace for fighting against nuclear in the 80s and 90s. I remember them handing out leaflets on Swanson St around 1990 trying to persuade the public against low carbon emission technologies.
      Having said that I think we are past breeder reactors as an option in Australia. SMR and MSR is something that we should get behind. Aukus treaty will change that up though. Australia will have our own nuclear reactors floating off shore soon enough not just the American ones that visit us from time to time.