Solar

Rooftop solar most reliable source of new generation on NEM, says report

Published by

The installation of solar on Australian homes and businesses has made rooftop PV the most reliable source of growing generation on the National Electricity Market, a new report has found.

In its January 2018 issue of the NEEA Electricity Update – the companion publication to the National Energy Emissions Audit Report – The Australia Institute says a rooftop solar market that had more than doubled since 2013 delivered record total of 6.2TWh in the year to December 2017.

“Rooftop solar has been installed by over 1.6 million households and is the most reliable source of steadily growing generation in the NEM (see Figure 3, red line),” the report says.

“Steady growth in rooftop solar PV, contributed to net generation or ‘generation sent out’, being 5 per cent lower than in June 2008 (see Figure 1 below),” the report added.

The report also noted that overall changes in the mix of generation supplying the NEM had delivered a drop in average emissions intensity for the year, of 0.2 per cent, to 0.831 t CO2-e/MWh.

“Up to the end of November 2017, reduction in demand for electricity from the grid contributed about one-third of the total reduction in annual emissions from NEM generation since June 2008,” said the TAI report.

“The other two thirds were contributed by the lower average emissions intensity of electricity generation.”

You can see these generation mix changes, which have driven this fall in average emissions intensity, illustrated in Figures 2 (below) and 3 (above).

Note the rise in the emissions after the Coalition repealed the carbon price, and the fall in emissions since the closure of the Northern and the Hazelwood power generators, which it opposed

But the report stresses that the fall in the brown coal share of generation is almost entirely due to the closure of one of Australia’s most dirty power stations, Hazelwood, in March last year.

And this is more or less cancelled out by the increased share of both black coal and gas-fired generation, in NSW, Victoria and South Australia.

“Both these generation sources have much lower emissions intensity than Hazelwood, as Figure 4 shows, and consequently overall emissions intensity fell steadily,” the report says.

Renewable generation also fell, however, “as the earlier increase in hydro generation was reversed and wind generation stayed roughly constant.”

Figure 7 shows a breakdown of the annual renewable share of generation, with the steady growth in rooftop solar.

Sophie Vorrath

Sophie is editor of Renew Economy and editor of its sister site, One Step Off The Grid . She is the co-host of the Solar Insiders Podcast. Sophie has been writing about clean energy for more than a decade.

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

“Self-erecting” wind turbine hits power milestone ahead of joining Fortescue Pilbara project

A prototype wind turbine using "self-erecting" tower technology is running at full capacity, ahead of…

26 March 2026

Another big battery prepares to power up as Sunshine state leads extraordinary charge to storage in 2026

Battery component of solar and storage facility joins the grid, part of a boom that…

26 March 2026

Fusion power plant possible by 2045 with massive effort, says science academy

Germany wants to build the world's first fusion power plant, and scientists say that might…

26 March 2026

Big spinning machines: State seeks partners for syncon rollout at former coal hub

Government seeks expressions of interest to partner in delivering at least three new synchronous condensers…

26 March 2026

A home battery case study: From little interest in storage, to bills that are always in credit

Until recently, I had little interest in purchasing a household battery. I am now one…

26 March 2026

Fake news on everything from whales to wind farms: Australia’s climate misinformation tsunami

Senate inquiry uncovers countless instances where misinformation – and often disinformation – is affecting public…

26 March 2026