Figure 1 Victoria base load futures. Source: ASX
As renewable energy foes and friends worked themselves into a tizzy over the last couple of weeks over just what happened in South Australia and why, the real action was quietly taking place on traders’ screens.
Over the past two weeks, futures prices in Victoria moved up 20% or $10/MWh. Yes that’s 20% in just two weeks. Prices in South Australia barely moved.
That move in the futures tells you that traders are starting to very seriously factor in the closure of Hazelwood. For the moment we think this is only the first wave of price movement. After all, it’s still speculative. Since April Victorian future prices are up 50% or over $20/MWh. That will add 10% to household bills and more to industry in percentage terms.
Household PV prices continue to fall. It’s just about economic to export back to grid.
Sydney, which still has a relatively low rooftop solar penetration (according to the APVI NSW has 15% households with PV compared to 30% in QLD), now has a median install price of just $1.23 w or $5000 for a 4KW system.
If you use your residential mortgage (NAB’s variable rate is 4.1%), and you get 14.5% capacity factor from your PV, 0.3% degradation and 25 year life (good luck with the inverter and the roof tiles) then you need just $65 MWh to break even.
That is very close to your friendly retailer’s feed in tariff (AGL offers $60 MWh, and actually Diamond Energy offers $80 MWh). Amazingly enough, it’s a way lower price than a utility solar plant requires in Australia, partly because of the upfront nature of SRECs, partly because of Australia’s world leading installation efficiencies, and partly because inverter prices are coming down.
Storage costs is coming down and energy density going up. LG presented its exciting (15% more energy density) and powerful new range of batteries. Prices have dropped 15% on last year and are forecast to come down another 15% next year.
Inverters that deal with all the complexities of hybrid systems are still in their infancy compared to the generic market but Redback (just acquired by EnergyAustralia caught the eye for its software). Still the inverter technology that could lead to a step change in inverter costs, probably forcing micro inverters into a very minor role, is the Solaredge “ HD-Wave”.
This technology is claimed to be 99% efficient and use substantially less materials. It uses thinfilm as opposed to electrolytic capacitors. In ITK’s opinion better and lower cost inverters would be another big leg up for the PV market.
Electricity and gas weekly review
Sources: NEM Review, ASX, Mercari, AEM
Share Prices
Volumes
Lower volumes in South Australia have impacted the numbers in a minor way. Still consumption in NSW and Victoria is flat year on year, and the ending of the car industry will lead to some demand decline. More energy efficiency is great for global warming efforts, but more support for electric vehicles powered by renewable energy would be a win win.
Base Load Futures
Gas Prices
David Leitch is principal of ITK. He was formerly a Utility Analyst for leading investment banks over the past 30 years. The views expressed are his own. Please note our new section, Energy Markets, which will include analysis from Leitch on the energy markets and broader energy issues. And also note our live generation widget, and the APVI solar contribution.
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