Fossil fuel civil war is good for renewables – and the planet

It’s taken a decade of supporting clean energy policies to help the renewable energy industry breach the barricades of the rich and powerful fossil fuel industry.

Now that it has happened – with new generation costs favouring wind and solar over coal and gas – the cause of the renewable energy industry is being assisted by a most unlikely development: the declaration of civil war within the fossil fuel industry.

stock-photo-2179680-duel-of-toy-soldiers

As Big Oil, Big Gas and Big Coal come to grips with the rapid changes in costs, and the so-called revolution in electricity markets that appears to have taken them by surprise, the fossil fuel giants are at war with each other over their declining market share, and plunging market prices for their commodities. Maybe it is just the impact of competition. But it is not just good news for wind and solar and other emerging renewables. It is also great news for the planet.

Take the oil industry as an example, where the oil price has crashed as OPEC countries led by Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries are trying to run the shale oil cowboys from the US out of town by keeping their supply taps on, even as prices fall.

The end result is that the higher-cost shale industry is closing down rapidly – more than one-third of rigs have been withdrawn from the market, and analysts are calling the end of a business model that many said was dubious from the start.

And the oil industry in general has deferred or cancelled an estimated $200 billion of spending in new projects, that would have cost more than twice the current market price. Exxon Mobil was the latest to announce a cut-back, slashing 15 per cent from its budget.

This is good news for the renewables industry, because delays and cancellations in the deployment of fossil fuel projects will lead global capital to find another outlet. And according to many leading investment banks, that leads inexorably to solar and other renewables, which can offer cheaper prices and guaranteed returns over the life of the assets – a financier’s paradise.

And it’s good news for the planet and the looming carbon budget. Saudi oil, for instance, is a lot cleaner – in terms of greenhouse gas emissions – than tar sands, shale, or what could be exploited from costly deepwater reserves or the Arctic.

The same is happening in the coal industry. Glencore, one of the biggest coal producers in the world, is putting a stop to some Australian production, and a hold on new developments, because of a fall in prices it blames on over-production from the likes of Rio Tinto.

It is a classic ruse deployed by large producers with lower costs – switch on the production taps to push the prices down, and watch your more expensive rivals suffer. BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto have been doing it in the iron ore industry, and now Rio Tinto is being accused of doing it again in coal.

Glencore boss Ivan Glasenberg says he won’t dig coal out of the ground “if we are not generating the returns.” His theory is that he can make more profit if it reduces production and pushes up the price. But it’s a big victory to the environmental movement; climate concerns were never likely to shut down fossil fuel projects, but bad economics will.

But the flip side of the supply equation is demand. China cut coal consumption by 2.9 per cent in 2014, leaving some to believe they may have already reached a peak in coal consumption, and reinforcing views that China could stop imports within a few years.

The sensational Chinese video hit Under the Dome, is being viewed as the next “An Inconvenient Truth”, but with more bite, and support from the government. The potential impact is so profound that Merrill Lynch warned that tighter pollution targets could trigger problems for many coal and oil producers, difficulties in the debt market and even a devaluation of the Chinese currency.

India is also unlikely to remain a huge coal importer. New research from Deutsche Bank shows how imported coal is being undercut by cheaper solar, which is now predicted to account for 25 per cent of that nation’s electricity supply by 2022. That is a phenomenal development.

In the electricity industry – the $2 trillion global monolith that sells electrons to customers – there is also profound change that amounts to civil war. The main battles are no longer being fought between fossil fuels and renewables – apart from in a few jurisdictions like Australia and some US states where the Conservatives play for Team Coal. The turf war has now moved between those utilities who are trying to embrace the future, and those that might be stuck in the past.

Consider what has happened in Europe, where the biggest utility E.ON, has chosen to dump its fossil fuel interests and focus on technologies that reflect the dramatic changes in the industry – localized generation, solar, wind, battery storage, micro grids and electric vehicles. RWE is following suit, albeit with a slightly different strategy.

In the US, the story is the same. David Crane, the CEO of NRG, the largest generation company in the country, has said that centralized fossil fuel generation is essentially dead, and the future lies in decentralised energy, and local generation, solar, wind; battery storage, micro grids and electric vehicles.

In Australia, the same preparations are being made. Origin Energy and AGL Energy are not quite ready to call the end to centralised generation, although Origin has hedged its bets – but both have made moves into the solar PPA market, where they will own the solar arrays on rooftops, and are also looking at battery storage, micro grids and electric vehicles.

They need to, because their biggest competition will not just come from the new entrants – be they solar specialists like SunEdison, SunPower or Sungevity; the smart technology geeks at Apple, Google and the myriad energy management system providers; or the battery storage developers or retailers with new business models, like PowerShop.

The real competition in the future will come from the utilities themselves. In a decentralised energy future, there will not be room for all the incumbent network operators, generators and retailers. Network operators such as SA Power Networks think they will survive and the centralized generators and the retailers will go the way of the telephone handset and the typewriter.

That sets the fascinating prospect that the future battles will be largely regulatory, essentially over who gets to embrace the technologies that will define the future, and deliver the products to market. It sure as hell won’t be fossil fuels. Even the incumbents know that.

Comments

15 responses to “Fossil fuel civil war is good for renewables – and the planet”

  1. Colin Nicholson Avatar
    Colin Nicholson

    Abundant fossil fuel also helps the geopolitical landscape by reducing the tendency to fight over the stuff. What I find difficult to understand is why the world isn’t sending wind turbines to Ukraine to neutralise Gasputin.

    1. Calamity_Jean Avatar
      Calamity_Jean

      Wind turbines sticking up would be too much of a target for artillery?

  2. Ken Dyer Avatar
    Ken Dyer

    In Australia, the electricity retailers are promoting solar panels and there is growth in industrial strength solar, even though the neoliberal Abbott Government has already gone on record as stating “coal is good for Australia”, and then keep on pouring taxpayer dollars into doomed projects like Abbott’s Point.

  3. TCFlood Avatar
    TCFlood

    I don’t understand the implied assertion that large scale utility production of electricity is dead and most production will be distributed. The NREL has estimated that if 100% of usable rooftop and small ground-level areas were used, it would amount to about 1/3 of current US electric energy consumption. If we were to convert our entire light vehicle fleet to electric battery EVs, it would add about a third to our present total electric energy consumption. That is to say, we will need large amounts of utility scale wind and solar power production for the foreseeable future. I don’t see how distributed generation can handle even the majority of needed generation.

    1. john Avatar
      john

      There will be a move to EV especially in the larger cities, with the demand for charge both day time and at home however utilising storage and RE at both will lead to little drain on the grid.
      As pointed out just who is to own the RE and storage that will be the interesting market segment split either private or company or perhaps new entrants in the market.
      In the Australian context the over supply situation in the generation capacity is of some hindrance to new entrants.
      Some painfully rationalisation will be seen in the oncoming years.

    2. Matthew Wright Avatar
      Matthew Wright

      Actually NREL are behind the 8ball on that one. They’ve done their estimates based on north facing roofs with contiguous strings of panels and no obstructions. Obstructions can be removed and panels can be mounted on the east west north and south. And within 10 years the panels will rise to 30% efficiency meaning 50% more power for the same land area. Because this is all about R&D – lowering costs will lower costs further as more people buy creating more momentum etc.

      On top of that an energy efficiency drive can route out greater than 50% of energy demand.

  4. michael Avatar
    michael

    “leads inexorably to solar and other renewables, which can offer cheaper prices and guaranteed returns over the life of the assets – a financier’s paradise.” hence, the RET isn’t required, financiers should be falling over themselves to finance large scale RE in australia right…?

    1. Roger Brown Avatar
      Roger Brown

      Not while the COALition Party is running (down ) the country /

    2. nakedChimp Avatar
      nakedChimp

      There is oversupply in generation, so new entrants have a hard time to get approval or connection.. especially under the current government.

      Just one example:
      Mt Emerald wind farm in Queensland.. ongoing since at least 2011.

  5. Wally Poole Avatar
    Wally Poole

    Don’t know about the “falling Fossil ” prices. Electricity has always had an upward swing. Here in NQ our prices went up by a small amount after the removal of the carbon tax. Certainly no decrease in sight yet.

    1. Alastair Leith Avatar
      Alastair Leith

      Giles is referring to commodity prices for coal and oil. Gas will of course rise to reach parity with export commodity price when the potential for export volume is realised. Electricity bills have almost nothing to do with commodity prices in a direct sense. There’s loads of articles on RenewEconomy about this, just search “gold plating” in RE Search field. Or watch this mildly amusing vid:

      http://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/video/2015/jan/30/power-prices-electricity-bills-carbon-tax-lnp-privatisation-queensland-video?CMP=soc_568
      The Undercurrent: Your power bill is not real – video

  6. suthnsun Avatar
    suthnsun

    At this juncture there could finally be some support for my long-called-for global ban on fossil fuel exploration? Even the fossil club might welcome an excuse to spend their shareholders capital on a more durable business plan?

  7. Carey Campbell Avatar

    Excellent article. Thank you. The Green Party Green New Deal eco jobs for the economy: solar jobs, wind jobs, geothermal jobs, conservation jobs, efficiency jobs has been right all along.

  8. Carey Campbell Avatar

    Just a personal story supporting the article: My house has 51 solar panels and geothermal heating and cooling. It is a plus house. Produces 10 times the energy consumed. I sell the excess to the power company. Walk, or take the train, or other public transportation. Decentralized. Profit making.

  9. Raahul Kumar Avatar
    Raahul Kumar

    This article is right for the wrong reasons.

    “India is also unlikely to remain a huge coal importer. New research from
    Deutsche Bank shows how imported coal is being undercut by cheaper
    solar, which is now predicted to account for 25 per cent of that nation’s electricity supply by 2022. That is a phenomenal development.”

    Solar power is not going to be 25% of the electricity supply by 2022.

    Capacity factor * 24 hours in a day * 365 days in a year = 5% of the electricity supply by 2022.

    However, the + factors are the following:

    Energy efficiency: LED light bulbs, LEED certified buildings etc is going to cut energy demand.

    Strong protests against coal mean that half of the projected coal build can’t happen.

    http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php/Opposition_to_coal_in_India#Opponents_have_halted_45.25_of_proposed_plants_–_that.27s_5_times_the_expected_attrition_rate

    Switch to biofuels like ethanol and biodiesel. So the demand for fossil fuels is vastly overstated.

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