The big talking point at Clean Energy Summit was the absence of the Coalition government and the lack of network planning. The consequences are about to be felt.
The Coalition government tried and failed to stop the RET, but it is clear that while that target will be easily met, any further growth in wind and solar will be hampered by the lack of policy and network planning as the physical, institutional and cultural hurdles take their toll.
Meanwhile, Victoria energy minister Lily D’Ambrosio says she has not heard of federal minister Angus Taylor since the election. The federal policy vacuum will continue for a while.i
Still D’Ambrosio is facing a crisis of her own in the state’s solar rebate scheme, where the quota for August disappeared in 90 minutes as though they were concert tickets. D’Ambrosio is insisting there will be no changes to the structure of the $1.3 billion scheme, but that position does not look tenable.
You can find this and other episodes of Energy Insiders here and on your favourite podcast platform.
Claims and promises of carbon offset schemes are falling deep into the category of being…
Australia has just experienced its worst heatwave in six years but it's set to become…
There will be daily cap on the federal government's Shared Solar free power offer, to…
Developer of what was once hailed as the biggest solar hybrid project cuts PV component…
Fortescue wind technology company says its turbines will be the "tallest, mightiest and the widest,"…
Rooftop solar reaches remarkable 117 pct of state demand in Australia's most advanced renewable state,…