Improved transmission to aid wind power in Australia

Published by

CleanTechnica

South Australia has a lot of wind power. The neighbouring state of Victoria doesn’t. Even though Victoria has just recently opened the largest wind farm in the southern hemisphere, its wind capacity only supplies about 5% of its total electricity use. As a result, when winds are high and its demand is low, South Australia exports electricity to Victoria. However, sometimes the transmission lines reach the limit of their capacity causing some wind power to go to waste. Losing a little green power is not a disaster, but it is a pity, since thanks to its use of brown coal, Victoria probably has the worst generating sector in the developed world in terms of greenhouse gas emissions per kilowatt-hour produced.

Fortunately, the transmission infrastructure between the two states is to be upgraded and one benefit will be to allow South Australia to export more wind power and allow Victoria to use less fossil fuel. According to the Australian Electricity Market Operator (AEMO) the Heywood interconnector will be upgraded from 460 megawatts to 650 megawatts, an increase of 40%. The upgrade is expected to be completed by 2016, will cost $108 million, and is expected to provide $190 million in benefits over its lifetime.

A more expensive option to build up to two gigawatts of additional transmission between the states was rejected. Given that we can’t be certain how much energy storage will cost in the near future and that Victoria has the potential to build a lot more wind capacity of its own if it wants, the cheaper option may be the best choice for the moment.

Oddly enough, there were fossil fuel interests that resisted any improvement in transmission capacity. I find this strange, because last time I checked they too were dependant upon the earth maintaining a habitable environment for the survival of themselves and their descendants.

This article was originally published on CleanTechnica. Reproduced with permission

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

South Korea auto giant bets $A8 billion on AI, hydrogen and solar-powered industrial future

South Korean car and EV maker invests nearly 9 trillion won in an “innovation hub”…

3 March 2026

Queensland LNP adds four-hour Bundaberg big battery to proposed call-in list

Another big battery proposal heads to Queensland planning purgatory following requests to call in the…

3 March 2026

Networks seek rule change to cut investment “red tape,” critics spy a new door to gold-plating

A rule change request from Energy Networks Australia seeks to shift some projects out of…

3 March 2026

Strikes on Iran show why quitting fossil fuels is more important than ever

Reducing oil dependence and boosting renewables and electric transport is often framed as climate policy.…

3 March 2026

Windy February sets new generation records, big batteries put the squeeze on gas

The Australian electricity grid has closed out the summer of 2025-26 with a month of…

3 March 2026

Australian renewables pipeline “running laps” around net zero targets. It’s the pace that is lacking

New data on Australia's solar, wind and battery development pipeline confirms that the constraint has…

3 March 2026