Policy & Planning

Bushfire crisis: The answer to future energy security lies on our rooftops

Published by

One Step Off The Grid

Three months ago I received a phone call from my father in San Francisco. He was standing outside of Costco, the only place that had back up power following the catastrophic wildfires across California. His entire community had been without power for three days. Torches and portable cookers were sold out and there was a line out the door for pre-cooked chickens. He said, ‘this feels like Cold War Russia, people lining up for their piece of bread’.

Fast forward three months and we’re having eerily similar conversations in Australia. Whole communities blacked out, shopping centres looking like something out of an apocalypse movie and many more scheduled black outs on the horizon. Entire states were urged to actively reduce their energy usage, asking us to forgo our air conditioners and fans in the middle of a heatwave.

If you were miles away from the nearest fire and wondered how cutting your energy usage could possibly have helped – the answer is simple, the fires forced closure of Australia’s ‘energy highways’ which put us at real risk of running out.

Australia’s ageing energy network is highly centralised. Power is generated at a few main points and distributed via huge power lines that run through the bush and into our cities.

Our states are connected via a main ‘power highway’, providing the option for states to share power when needed. During the bushfire crisis, our interstate power highway was closed.

Powerlines are shut down to mitigate against them igniting and subsequently spreading fires. New fires can also start when trees brush up against live lines. When the main line from a centralised source is shut down, countless communities are affected.

This is nothing but a Band-Aid solution to a much wider problem. The decentralisation of Australia’s energy network is urgently needed and the solution lies on our rooftops.

To read the full story on RenewEconomy sister site One Step Off The Grid, click here…

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

Australia’s biggest wind project and 8 battery hybrids among 19 winners of largest CIS renewable auction

Latest CIS tender dominated by wind projects and battery hybrids, with 7.8 GW of new…

23 May 2026

Better internet, fewer feral pigs: Renewable developers join forces with locals to make lasting change

Work is underway on a major telecommunications upgrade – and other practical initiatives – to boost…

22 May 2026

CSIRO is cutting vital climate science jobs. Here’s what’s at stake for Australia

Proposed cuts to staff in CSIRO's environment unit are likely to take in the team…

22 May 2026

“Not just a call centre:” Home battery contender doubles down on Australia-made strengths

In the mad rush to home battery storage, this Australian company is doubling down its…

22 May 2026

Sungrow says advanced inverter trials show they can provide heart-beat of the grid in absence of coal

Chinese power company echoes findings of Tesla and Fluence, saying tests show grid forming inverters…

22 May 2026

Australia just suffered its worst wind and solar “drought” in four years – but needed less gas backup

What happens when the wind don't blow and the sun don't shine? Australia got a…

22 May 2026