Australia Procurement News Notice - 61630


Procurement News Notice

PNN 61630
Work Detail A report by the Clean Energy Council finds performance from the large-scale renewables sector was “particularly poor” in 2023 Australia’s large-scale renewables industry saw a “significant downturn” in investment in 2023 despite the country’s overall growth in the sector, according to the country’s renewable energy body the Clean Energy Council (CEC). Renewables accounted for 39.4% of Australia’s total electricity supply last year, up 9.7% from 2022 and a huge leap from 2017, when renewables accounted for just 17% of the country’s energy mix. Additional generation capacity for the year ended on 5.9GW, up from 5GW year-on-year, the CEC’s annual report published Tuesday finds. 3.1GW – or more than half – of Australia’s new capacity came from small-scale rooftop solar, installed on homes or business buildings. In total, 337,498 households and businesses installed rooftop solar panels, up from 315,499 in 2022, accounting for 28.5% of all renewable generation for the year. 2.8GW of new large-scale project capacity was completed and hooked up to the grid. Clean Energy Council chief executive Kane Thornton said renewables had now reached a critical tipping point in the Australian energy mix, adding that the industry has faced “profound change” over the last 12 months. “2023 was also a significant year for construction and new financial commitments to utility-scale storage. Twenty-seven battery projects are under construction, up from 19 at the end of 2022. Investment stands at a massive $4.9 billion, up from $1.9 billion in the year prior,” Thornton said. However, despite an overall increase in domestic renewables capacity, a “significant downturn” in investment, particularly in large-scale generation projects, remains an issue for the sector, the report finds. Its authors said the country’s renewable sector is increasingly split between “particularly poor” investment in large-scale plants while rooftop solar continues to boom, with investments in batteries “storming ahead”. No new financial commitments to utility-scale wind projects occurred in 2023, a situation the CEC described as “disheartening”. Just seven new financial commitments for utility-scale solar projects totalling 921MW were recorded, down from 10 projects totalling 1.5 GW at the end of 2022. Just $1.5bn was secured for new projects in 2023, less than a quarter of the $6.5bn invested in 2022. The report comes as data from the Australian Energy Markets Operator shows coal power stations expanded generation in the first two months of 2024 as heatwaves in the country’s east sent demand soaring. Australia’s power generation system is the second most coal-dependent in the OECD, behind Poland, according to statistics from climate think tank Ember. Industry hopes of a revival for large-scale projects hinge in part on the federal Labour government’s capacity investment scheme (CIS), a national framework designed to increase investment in renewables. Last November, the government announced ambitious plans to add 32GW of renewable capacity to the national grid by 2030 by expanding the CIS. In October, the CEC recommended that the federal government invest a minimum of $10bn in renewables projects annually over the next 10 years, or $100bn collectively by the mid-2030s, if it is to achieve its 82% renewable capacity by 2030 target.
Country Australia , Australia and New Zealand
Industry Energy & Power
Entry Date 14 Mar 2024
Source https://www.power-technology.com/news/australian-renewables-facing-alarming-slowdown-report/?cf-view

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