GE: Some Australia regions to be 100% renewable in 5-10 years

General Electric, the industrial behemoth that remains the biggest provider of energy equipment in the world, predicts that some regions in Australia will soon get all their electricity from renewables – at least for a few days a year

Jerome Pécresse – the president and CEO of GE Renewable Energy – used the prediction to highlight the rapid change in renewables, and particularly its falling costs and ability to be integrated into the grid, which he said was still being underestimated.

“Within 5 to 10 years, there will be regions and areas in this country which will have 100 per cent renewable energy, at least for a few days a year,” he said at the Clean Energy Summit in Sydney on Tuesday. But this proportion would grow, he added.

Pécresse said renewables were now at “grid partiy” in most parts of the world, and would continue to get cheaper and cheaper, and the ability of consumers to supply their own needs would be hugely disruptive to existing utility business models.

“We are just at the beginning. It is never going to stop,” he said, noting there was going to be continued competition from the cost of solar energy (which is also forcing more cost reductions in wind energy).

Pécresse also predicted that many customers, including communities, would go “off grid” while on-grid customers would be “aggregated” – meaning that they could be supplied by alternatives to the current utilities.

“The role of customers will fundamentally change,” he said.

Comments

12 responses to “GE: Some Australia regions to be 100% renewable in 5-10 years”

  1. Steve159 Avatar
    Steve159

    nah, clean coal will save the day
    lol

    1. solarguy Avatar
      solarguy

      Well you can wash it, you can even lacquer it, but for Christ sake don’t burn it.

      1. MrMauricio Avatar
        MrMauricio

        that shiny piece of lacquered coal passed around Parliament by the fossil fools will live on forever -as a museum specimen.

        1. Steve159 Avatar
          Steve159

          They’ll have to think of something to do with the stuff.
          maybe “clean coal recipes” (like chocolate covered cotton wool in Catch22).
          … coalslaw, anyone?

        2. solarguy Avatar
          solarguy

          And wax figures of the chimps from the LNP jerking off over it would make for even more of a laugh. Perhaps the comedy show Mad As Hell could take it up. I’m pissing myself just thinking about it. Copy right “solarguy”

        3. Steve159 Avatar
          Steve159

          Yeah, the LNP aren’t much good at seeing ahead (visionary). When the next election nears, Labor and/or the Greens need to show that footage, to remind voters of just how stupid the LNP were, and are.

        4. Ren Stimpy Avatar
          Ren Stimpy

          Only if a heroic archeologist ventures into the bowels of Morrison’s parliamentary office to retrieve it. Something like this….

  2. solarguy Avatar
    solarguy

    Our house is already 100% renewable for the most part anyway! Since 14/417 we have only imported about 50kwh mainly for boosting our solar hot water, June was shit of a month. Any way since the system was commissioned, the first 28 days the grid was switched off and what a feeling that was, then I didn’t design it just to be off grid, there was money to make from EA with the FIT and there was and still is a hell of a lot exported.

    If any utilities are going to survive in the future, they need to get cracking on a brand new business model, real soon!

    1. Roger Franklin Avatar
      Roger Franklin

      As the article says “We are just at the beginning. It is never going to stop”.

    2. Ian Avatar
      Ian

      Your last sentence rings very true. What would be your vision for a future grid? Mine would be millions of homes and businesses capable of independent energy supply, trading electricity over the grid, some in clusters of mini grids, others with renewables installations distant from their point of use. Such as solar gardens where inner city dwellers install their solar on large buildings or out of town and use it, via the grid, in their rented or inner city apartment. The grid would be an electron highway system or an electron marketplace. I would also see vehicles fully integrated into the electricity marketplace V2G capabilities

      1. solarguy Avatar
        solarguy

        The retailers I think will need to have a multi faceted model, AGL is a gentailer as you know, so their model may be something like this:

        Buy a large amount of capacity from roof top solar to on sell to other customers, whether that be for EV’s, residential, business or industrial. Much the same as their doing now, but their going to have to pay a better price for the power in peak and ultra peak times or they will loose that market for the most part.

        I can see them getting into grid scale battery storage as well, near sub stations etc. Also they will continue to invest in big solar, wind and storage like PHES, big time. Even homes and businesses that have solar and storage will need to buy power from the grid in times of inclement weather.

        Big industrial users, like Aluminium smelters will need huge amounts of power and so will all electrified transport 24/7 and I see this as the biggest part of their business. I can see any business getting into fast charging outlets no just the big guys. Mini grids will be a very competitive market and keep this in mind if they have no grid connection they will need to be self sufficient 100% and that means over sized solar, perhaps wind in the right areas and plenty of storage.

  3. Gnällgubben Avatar
    Gnällgubben

    Utilities could make themselves useful again if they had some foresight but it’s easier of course to reap some short-time profits and then whine to the government for more regulation and handouts.

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