State and federal energy ministers meet again on Friday to talk about the best way to redesign Australia’s electricity market, in light of what should be a rapid transition to renewables and the managed closure of the country’s remaining coal fired generators.
Already it is clear that the Energy Security Board’s proposal, and federal energy minister Angus Taylor’s preferred option – for a sort of capacity market that would deliver excessive payments to incumbent coal generators – is dead in the water after the rejection by the two biggest states, NSW and Victoria, and indifference from others.
The question remains: if the capacity market is rightly a no go, then what are the options that the energy ministers should be considering?
Analysts Johanna Bowyer from IEEFA and Tristan Edis from Green Energy Markets, who together authored a study that suggested Taylor’s favoured “Coal-keeper” mechanism could deliver a windfall $6.9 billion to coal generators, funded by consumers, have come up with a range of alternatives.
They also suggest, quite pointedly, that these possible measures should be further developed and evaluated by a “genuinely independent panel of energy market and decarbonisation technology experts.” It’s a message, shared by others, that the ESB is no longer considered as such.
“Unlike the ESB, these individuals should not be not be dependent on ministers for their ongoing employment,” Bowyer and Edis write.
“This will ensure recommendations are not distorted by short-term political pressures and do not obscure or pass over uncomfortable but important challenges society must grapple with as we seek an electricity system which delivers reliable, affordable and ultimately zero emission power.”
Here is their list of possible proposals:
It is clear that some governments are already considering at least one or more of these proposals. NSW energy minister Matt Kean is in favour of, or at least open to, direct talks with coal generators along the same lines as Victoria.
NSW already has a “go it alone” strategy, with a detailed roadmap for the rollout of at least five renewable energy zones, some 12GW of new wind and solar generation and at least 2GW of large scale storage.
That can and will be expanded as need arises, and particularly if NSW – as Kean has suggested it could – seeks to facilitate the removal of all coal generation by 2030, as per the urging of the UN and climate scientists.
Victoria has rejected the Coal-keeper proposal outright, and is looking for new ideas. It says that whatever the final choice, it is now clear that the focus must be on paving the way for fast, flexible and smart dispatchable capacity to replace the ageing and increasingly unreliable coal generators.
But that is not the way the federal government is thinking.
“Comments by energy minister Angus Taylor appear to indicate that batteries will be cut out from qualifying for capacity payments,” says Edis.
“This is based on a dubious claim that only power sources which can deliver capacity over long periods of time can fill the gap left by exiting coal.
“Analysis that takes into account variability of wind and solar power suggests that the vast bulk of the gap left by exiting coal can be filled with batteries capable of supplying power for around 6 hours or less.”
The whole market is ready to move. There are two, at most four, coal generators that actually support the capacity market proposal put forward by the ESB, despite its insistence that it is “technology neutral.”
“A financial lifeline to aging thermal power plants leaves the NEM reliant on supply that will become increasingly unreliable, and exacerbates uncertainty about when coal plants may exit,” Bowyer and Edis write. “This uncertainty will deter investment in newer, more flexible and more reliable power plants.”
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