Categories: CommentaryRenewables

South Australia wind energy jumps to 43% in July

Published by

South Australia’s wind farms produced enough electricity to meet a record 43 per cent of the state’s power needs during July, and on occasions during the month provided all the state’s electricity needs.

The output was boosted by the addition of the 275MW Snowtown II wind farm earlier in the month. Before that, the state’s 1,200MW of wind farms had provided around 28 per cent of the state’s electricity demand in 2012/13.

Combined with the state’s 550MW of solar power, it is likely that nearly half of the state’s electricity demand came from variable renewable sources such as wind and solar – a record for a major developed economy.

Spain, for instance, this week, said that in July solar made up 8 per cent of its power supply, spread evenly between concentrated solar thermal and solar PV – while wind energy contributed 16.8% of the overall energy generation mix.

“With more than 40 per cent of the state’s power demand provided by wind energy for the entire month, it is clear that large amounts of renewable energy can be added to the system without the need for extra backup generation to be built,” Clean Energy Council acting Chief Executive Kane Thornton said in a statement.

“The South Australian example shows that wind power can generate jobs and investment, as well as large amounts of renewable electricity.

“During a short period early in the morning of 31 July, wind power met all of the state’s power needs, as well as providing more than 90 per cent for large parts of 8 July,” he said.”

As well as the new record set in South Australia, wind power provided an average of about 7 per cent of Victoria’s electricity demand, and around 6 per cent across the National Electricity Market.

Thornton said that while wind was variable, it was also predictable, allowing the grid operator to source the mix of power generation that would deliver the lowest possible prices for consumers.

“This technology has been a clear wind-win for South Australia, generating more than $5 billion of investment over the last decade, creating hundreds of jobs and providing the state with a cleaner power supply – at a low cost to consumers.

“None of this would be possible without the national Renewable Energy Target, which is currently under review. Approximately $15 billion of additional investment will be generated by the policy if the scheme if left as it is currently legislated.”

Giles Parkinson

Giles Parkinson is founder and editor of Renew Economy, and of its sister sites One Step Off The Grid and the EV-focused The Driven. He is the co-host of the weekly Energy Insiders Podcast. Giles has been a journalist for more than 40 years and is a former deputy editor of the Australian Financial Review. You can find him on LinkedIn and on Twitter.

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

Australian researchers hope to put fresh spin on next-gen vertical wind turbines

Flinders University will trial a next-generation vertical wind turbine south of Adelaide in a research…

14 January 2025

AI and electricity: Are data centres the new aluminium smelters of demand – and how will we power them?

In Australia, AI-driven data centres are starting to approach the current industry leader for electricity…

14 January 2025

Gina Rinehart-backed, geothermal powered “pit to battery” project marks key milestone

ASX-listed Vulcan Energy Resources is marking a milestone in developing a sustainable EV battery supply…

14 January 2025

Compressed air storage pioneer secures billion-dollar loan to deliver 8 hours back-up to California grid

The outgoing Biden Administration commits to help fund the deployment of a novel long-duration energy…

14 January 2025

Peter Dutton’s “always on” nuclear power is about as reliable as wind and solar – during a renewables drought

New analysis finds modern nuclear power plants are, on balance, about as "always on" as…

14 January 2025

Much of Australia has the same climate as LA. When it comes to bushfires, that doesn’t bode well

The catastrophic fires burning in one of the most densely populated parts of the United…

13 January 2025