Wind and solar smash records as renewables reach new peak of 72.5 pct on main grid

Published by

Wind and solar have smashed records on Australia’s main grid, delivering an instantaneous share of more than 70 per cent of generation for the first time and pushing the renewable energy share to a new peak of 72.5 per cent on Tuesday.

The new records, the latest in a string of stunning new milestones this spring, was reached at 1.05pm (AEST) on Tuesday, and comprised a record 70.9 per cent of wind and solar alone, with hydro providing just 1.6 per cent at the time, according to data compiled by GPE NEMLog.

The new peak came mostly from rooftop solar, which provided 41.5 per cent of generation at the time, with large scale solar a further 17 per cent, and wind energy 12.3 per cent.

The potential for renewables was even higher, and could have taken the total to more than 90 per cent were it not for the fact that heavy curtailment, mostly for economic factors due to negative wholesale prices, equated to nearly 18 per cent of grid production at the time.

Source: GPE NEMLog. Please click to expand.

According to GPE NEMLog, the output of variable renewable energy – wind and solar – hit a new peak of 19971.30 MW, falling just short of the 20,000 MW benchmark.

The growing share of renewables, of course, pushed the share of coal and total fossil fuels to a new instantaneous low, with coal falling to just 25 per cent of generation on the main grid.

The unusual aspect of some of the most recent renewable record shares is that they have been occurring on weekdays, when industrial demand is usually high. Previously, most of the records fell on weekends or public holidays due to low demand.

Most renewable share records occur in Spring, due to the relatively mild weather and lack of grid demand for air conditioning. On Sunday, for the first time, the share of renewables averaged 50 per cent over a full 24 hour period.

The share of renewables over the last 12 months has grown to 38.5 per cent, still needing to more than double to reach the federal government’s target of 82 per cent renewables by 2030. The market operator expects to accomodate brief periods of up to 100 per cent renewables by 2025.

more to follow

Giles Parkinson

Giles Parkinson is founder and editor of Renew Economy, and is also the founder of One Step Off The Grid and founder/editor of 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 business and deputy editor of the Australian Financial Review. You can find him on LinkedIn and on Twitter.

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

Australia’s best performing wind and solar farms in October

Best performing wind farms split between north, south, east and west, but the solar results…

3 November 2024

Developers quietly shed solar generation to focus on battery only projects

Developers are cutting generation from their projects and going with a battery-only approach. Solar is…

3 November 2024

Australia reaches record monthly renewable share of 47.4 per cent, and poised to leap further ahead

Australia's main grid reached a record renewable share of 47.4 pct for October, while in…

3 November 2024

Energy Insiders Podcast: How to replace gas

The gas industry says we need more of the fossil fuel to prosper. Jarrod Leak,…

1 November 2024

Queensland LNP names new energy minister, nixes massive pumped hydro project

Queensland LNP to combine treasurer and energy minister role, as it moves quickly to stop…

1 November 2024

More records tumble as renewables hit new high and coal a new low

Rooftop solar propels renewables to a new record share of the main grid, and pushes…

1 November 2024