Wheat farmers help drive 20% boost in WA rooftop solar uptake

New data has revealed that more than 180,000 West Australian households now have solar PV on their rooftops, taking total residential penetration to 18 per cent of the state’s population: an increase of nearly one fifth in just one year.

The data – put together by the office of WA Greens Senator Scott Ludlam using the most recent figures from the Clean Energy Regulator and specially commissioned data from the ABS – show that WA’s combined solar rooftops currently have a total rated capacity of 463.396 MW – the equivalent of two typical coal fired power stations.

The state now boasts four postcodes in the Australian top 20 solar installers, including Mandurah at number 2, North East Wanneroo at number 8, Canning Vale/Willeton at number 12, and Cockburn at number 19.

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Ludlam, who is also co-deputy leader of the Australian Greens, said the statistics showed just how far ahead of the curve the state’s householders were, compared to the state government.

“Energy Minister Mike Nahan has previously expressed surprise at the rapid take-up of rooftop solar by the state’s households and leads a department completely underprepared for the rapid switch to clean energy,” Ludlam said in a statement on Monday.

“It’s like being surprised by a snail – you have to have your back turned for an awfully long time.

And – like the data on rooftop PV distribution by electorate, which we reported on last week – the WA data puts paid to the myth that solar energy is the preserve of wealthy householders, with evidence that the state’s lower-income postcodes and small Wheatbelt towns were leading the charge to solar self generation.

A total of six regional communities made it into WA’s top 20 solar postcodes this year, said Ludlam, including Dardanup (at #2) in WA’s south-west region, where 36 per cent of rooftops have solar; and Mundijong (#3) in the southern area of the greater Perth region, with 34 per cent of households installing solar.

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In a separate analysis, the communities of Yealering (6372) and Pingaring (6357) in the southern Wheatbelt shire of Kulin achieved a massive increase in solar uptake of 37 per cent in just one year – a statistic the Greens say represents a “massive game changer.”

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“WA’s great placement in the top twenty shows that more householders are discovering that renewable power from PV solar is cheaper for their families than fossil fuels,” said Ludlam.

“Householders are making an important investment and in doing so, they’re saving the state a lot of money, by putting downward pressure on electricity demand.

“The state government should be working hard to ensure our grid and infrastructure can support an ongoing increase in the uptake of solar PV and other clean energy technologies. Instead, we see a state government mired in fossil thinking. We are now facing a reality where the use of renewable energy is being limited because the state government refused to undertake any planning,” he said.

Comments

2 responses to “Wheat farmers help drive 20% boost in WA rooftop solar uptake”

  1. Tim Buckley Avatar
    Tim Buckley

    Sounds like it is about time for previously free-marketeer Mike Nahan to give out some more taxpayer funded subsidies to those loss-making Chinese and Indian owned coal mines at Collie, and to the coal-fired power plants around WA. That plus a few punitive extra fixed price connection charges specific to solar households to reduce the customers’ ability to protect themselves from their electricity utilities. Cant have solar energy diminishing the returns to the fossil fuel dinosaurs that are paying good money for their friends in public office.

  2. Karl Avatar
    Karl

    IMHO
    Mike Nahan is trying to remove all government subsidies us West Australians currently enjoy. Unfortunately its not very politically popular to tell the voters their cost of power will rise another 25%, hence rollback of subsidies over longer periods is the best he can do without too much public outcry.
    I’m all for cost reflective pricing so we can start selling $20K+ battery storage hybrid PV systems. currently with exports paid at ~7c and night rate on smartpower at ~11c storage in WA simply does not stack up as cost to do so in battery cycles is closer to 20c/kWh stored.
    Time to complain when exports are not paid at all and peak rates are actually reflective of grid demand and costs in the network (ie hot summers day think upwards of 60c/kWh).

    PV is hugely popular in Perth as we have one of the lowest installed costs of PV anywhere in the world, other developed nations have similar costs for power or more and PV systems in their countries dont perform as well and cost typically double what the do here.
    Australia truly is the lucky country. – particularly sunny Perth!

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