Australia is in the middle of a renewables investment boom that, despite just constant disappointment and uncertainty at the federal level, will see the country reach our Renewable Energy Target earlier than predicted.
But while solar panels, wind turbines and hydropower are the most popular forms of renewable energy, the truth is Australia has much weirder stuff going on. Crikey talked with Climate Council energy and climate solutions analyst Petra Stock to see what else is going on in Australia.
Geothermal
How does it work: Systems that steal precious, precious heat from beneath the earth’s surface vary according to the state and temperature of the natural resource. For example “hot sedimentary aquifers” (HSA) use existing hot water or brine found in naturally occurring reservoirs; “enhanced geothermal systems” (EGS) create steam by pumping water through hot rocks 3-5 kilometers below the earth’s surface; and “direct use systems” skip the electricity phase altogether and directly pump hot/cold groundwater wherever it is needed.
Australian status: Early stages and rocky starts. While geothermal counts as a major resource for highly volcanic countries like Iceland and Kenya, projects are relatively uncommon in volcanically-boring Australia, a challenge historically compounded by the distance between remote geothermal project and customers. All the current action is happening in Queensland, with one HSA plant operating in Birdsville, another coming online in Winton Shire, and plants currently being explored or developed in Thargomindah, Quilpie, Normanton and Longreach.
Why is it interesting: As newer microgrid technologies encourage greater independence from existing grids, projects are becoming increasingly attractive to regional towns because they can provide 24/7 “baseload” electricity and incorporate existing infrastructure and resources. Stock points to Winton Shire’s application of existing water bores as an example of the town “making use of what infrastructure they have already; obviously building on that, but as a way of minimising the impact of that project.”
Bioenergy
How does it work: Transforms biomass, or biological waste, into electricity, heat, or liquid fuel. Again, the process is especially attractive to regional areas because the most popular forms of biomass account for agricultural waste, notably wood, animal waste, oil seeds and, according to ongoing research at the University of Melbourne, algae.
Australian status: Our number-one forgotten renewable, biomass provided roughly 1.5% of Australia’s power generation in 2016 and, at 8.6% of total renewable output, comes in fourth behind hydro (42.3%), wind (30.8%) and small scale solar PV (16%). Recent projects include Queensland’s Tableland Sugar Mill, which uses the most popular form of biomass, sugarcane waste or “bagasse”; Brooklyn, Victoria’s City Circle Waste Timber Gasification Plant, a timber-powered plant using crushing and recycling waste; and Queensland’s Darling Downs Fresh Eggs, which in 2015 became the first Australian business to be powered by chicken poo.
Why is it interesting: It is energy from actual waste, what more could you want? While conversion processes still release carbon dioxide, bioenergy counts as sustainable because the major source, plants, take carbon out of the atmosphere while growing and can be managed sustainably in relation to food and animal waste.
“The great thing about biomass is its usually using some sort of existing waste product,” Stock says, noting that the process is most often used in farms or related business such as Victoria’s Berrybank Piggery, which “has a plant that converts all that piggery waste into both electricity, to power their own operations, and also fertiliser.”
“I mean that’s great: they get cheaper electricity bills and this other useful product out of something that was otherwise a waste product.”
Read part two of Crikey’s list of alternative alternatives here.
We are fiddling with trivia while the climate burns! Every romantic indulgence in renewables requires a massive backup by gas, emitting fossil carbon. These are not solutions; they are distractions. We are failing to face facts.
If we are to limit warming to 1.5°, we must eradicate all fossil carbon fuels by 2050. That is “eradicate”, not “reduce”. This deadline is in your lifetime. Neither is the process of getting to net zero emissions a problem for the grandkids to worry about. It is ours. Today.
We have a nuclear size problem, it needs a nuclear size solution. The grandkids will condemn us for failing to use it.
Renewables do not have to be backed up by gas plants – they can be backed up by hydro, pumped hydro storage, batteries and heat storage.
I suggest that the only nuclear technology that would be appropriate is nuclear fusion, but since that is still many years away from being viable, it won’t happen.
btw Gas plants usually replace coal plants, and there is benefit for climate change in doing just that.
I like my nuclear fusion reactor 150M km away, thanks. Where it is now.
Some interesting facts & figures here. Looking forward to part 2.
I understand that all Queensland sugar mills now store excess cane fibre ( bagasse) which is burned during the year to provide energy for the grid during the year outside the crushing season. The eight big Wilmar ( the old CSR ) sugar mills generate almost 25% of the renewable energy in Queensland , greater contribution than the relativekly small TableLands mill.
https://www.wilmarsugarmills.com.au/media-centre/249-fast-facts-on-our-cogeneration-23-november-2017/file
I was surprised to see how much of Europe’s energy is coming from biomass: http://reneweconomy.com.au/graph-day-renewables-overtake-coal-european-electricity-supply-33695/
Very promising, IMO.
You might enjoy the ‘cash for ash’ rort run by the Proddies in Northern Ireland a couple of years ago.
The wizard idea of paying 150% of the cost for wrong foot farmers to heat their animal factories using biomass – pine sawdust pellets shipped from Canada.
Win-Win-Win for the fossil fuel industries.
“Pig racing”? There’s that much at chop? …. Still it’s better than a photo of a bucket of Jethro.
For extracting calorific content, it’s hard to beat pig shit. The problem is finding enough people willing to commit slow suicide by eating all that bacon.
Worked for Aunt Entity in Mad Max Beyond the ThunderDome
Ah, the Electric Acid Granny, good times.