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Turnbull’s right: we need cheap, clean and reliable power – here’s how

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2017-02-02 14:59
Better managing how we use electricity in our homes will reduce pressure on the grid, and reduce the need for more power stations.
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Turnbull hypes energy storage, sends mixed message on renewables

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2017-02-02 14:21
The PM's call to arms on energy storage R&D is a welcome sign of forward policy thinking on renewables. Or is it?
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Solar + storage installs set to treble on back of “exceptional” battery market growth

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2017-02-02 13:24
Report says "exceptional" 2016 battery uptake points to even more remarkable growth in 2017, with 15 per cent of new solar installations expected to include storage, and a massive 70% of solar households looking to invest in a battery system.
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South Australian energy minister: 'Clean coal is a fairytale' – video

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-02-02 13:22

South Australia’s energy minister, Tom Koutsantonis, responds to the federal government’s push for clean coal generation as an energy source for Australia’s future. He says ‘clean coal is a fairytale, clean coal doesn’t exist’, following calls by the prime minister, Malcolm Turnbull and his deputy, Barnaby Joyce

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SENG QLD February Newsletter - Emergency Climate Action

Newsletters QLD - Thu, 2017-02-02 12:55
SENG QLD February Newsletter - Emergency Climate Action
Categories: Newsletters QLD

Take the blinkers off: Coal is not the answer

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2017-02-02 12:11
When will Turnbull and co, take their blinkers off and recognise Australia should be getting into battery storage, not clean coal.
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Coalition ministers seek to railroad CEFC into backing “clean coal”

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2017-02-02 11:53
Turnbull government ministers rally to support PM's vision of clean coal power generation in Australia, – financed by the CEFC.
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How Malcolm Turnbull could ignore the facts and fund the myth of 'clean' coal

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-02-02 11:03

The Coalition could use the Clean Energy Finance Corporation to finance new coal power stations but it wouldn’t be cheaper than renewables

Just a few months ago, the idea that a new coal power station would ever be built in Australia seemed laughable. Banks, energy companies and even the Turnbull government seemed to accept the inevitable decline of the coal industry.

But, since then, the Turnbull government has been furiously talking up the idea of “clean” coal. And while no bank is likely to finance the building of a new coal-fired power station here, Turnbull and his ministers have been indicating the government might themselves fund them.

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Celebrating Murray–Darling Basin wetlands on World Wetland Day

Department of the Environment - Thu, 2017-02-02 10:36
The Murray–Darling Basin has more than 30,000 wetlands — 16 of international importance under the Ramsar Convention, which are fundamental to the health and viability of the whole basin.
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After the rhetoric comes supply and demand

RenewEconomy - Thu, 2017-02-02 10:29
Once Hazelwood goes the question is what will replace it? Not nearly enough renewables are being built.
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Clickbait

BBC - Thu, 2017-02-02 10:06
The mobile phone apps that are enabling fishermen to increase their catches at the same time as helping environmentalists monitor and preserve stocks.
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'Platypus of microbiology' bacterium pushes boundaries of evolution

ABC Science - Thu, 2017-02-02 10:02
EVOLUTION OF LIFE: A bacterium dubbed the "platypus of microbiology" is even stranger than first thought, with the discovery it contains structures normally only found in more complex cells.
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New UK science body appoints chief

BBC - Thu, 2017-02-02 06:26
Prof Sir Mark Walport has been appointed to head Britain's newly created science funding organisation.
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Quantum computer 'construction plan' drawn up

BBC - Thu, 2017-02-02 06:13
Physicists have drawn up construction plans for a large-scale quantum computer.
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'Clean coal' not a factor in future energy mix: new report

ABC Environment - Thu, 2017-02-02 05:49
A new report points to a global decline in coal generation as solar PV and electric vehicles gain market share.
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Use your loaf to avoid wasteful food habits | Letters

The Guardian - Thu, 2017-02-02 05:44

After reading your article (Weighing in to fight waste in the kitchen with a measuring spoon – and an app, 28 January) I felt so guilty I went and dug out from the compost bin two very brown soggy bananas I had thrown away earlier and made them into a banana loaf. Apart from the satisfaction of the loaf, I was also able to knock 252g/9oz off my somewhat nerdy tally of food wasted in January. I decided at new year to record how much food we wasted in an effort to reduce it – a paper version of the app in the article. It’s made us really conscious about not wasting food, because we hate to be the one who has to “put it in the book”. I thought the bananas were beyond hope – but I’ve just had a delicious slice and will live to tell the tale. Now for the sugar angst.
Patricia Golding
London

Join the debate – email guardian.letters@theguardian.com

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Drilling into heart of Iceland volcano complete

BBC - Thu, 2017-02-02 05:23
Geologists in Iceland have drilled deeper into a volcano than ever before, reaching a depth of 4,659m.
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Turnbull's right: we need cheap, clean and reliable power – here's how

The Conversation - Thu, 2017-02-02 05:04
Better managing how we use electricity in our homes will reduce pressure on the grid, and reduce the need for more power stations. Power line image from www.shutterstock.com

As Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull noted in his National Press Club address yesterday, energy policy is all about balancing the trifecta of affordability, reliability and sustainability. More commonly known as the “energy tri-lemma”, it can often seem impossible to achieve all three objectives at the same time.

For instance, in Australia’s current energy debate, fossil fuel advocates claim that only coal and natural gas can deliver reliable and affordable power.

In the opposite corner, renewable power is synonymous with sustainability, but many governments remain unconvinced that it can also guarantee reliable, low-cost energy. Until renewable energy overcomes this scepticism, calls from the likes of former prime minister Tony Abbott to limit its growth will find a receptive audience.

However, there is a powerful solution to the energy tri-lemma and, after decades of neglect, Australia may be about to give it a serious try.

The missing link

The missing link is “demand management”. This is where energy utilities support consumers to save energy and shift demand, instead of building expensive new energy supply.

The greatest volatility in the current electricity system is not solar and wind generation, but the peaks and troughs in demand. And it is generally peak demand that drives investment in expensive new electricity infrastructure like poles, wires and power stations. Managing the amount of electricity we use and when we use it can save money, for both utilities and consumers, and reduce our impact on the environment.

Demand management has long been a smart strategy, but recent developments mean its value is increasing. For instance, the rapid growth in rooftop solar generation has led to a reduction in net power demand in the middle of the day, followed by a rapid spike in demand in the early evening, particularly in summer as we come home and turn on our air conditioners.

The emergence of this solar-driven “duck-shaped” demand curve has led to calls for us to “behead the duck” or, in more humane symbolism, teach the duck to fly.

We’re already using it

While unfamiliar to many, demand management has been around for decades. It includes off-peak water heating, which started here in the 1930s. It is already reducing peak electricity demand by hundreds of megawatts. That’s a saving to Australian electricity consumers of hundreds of millions of dollars in avoided electricity supply costs.

If you have an off-peak water heater or pool pump, or a time-of-use power tariff, you are already part of a demand-management program. If you are saving money with efficient LED lights or a five-star refrigerator, you are benefiting from technology developed by demand-management efforts overseas.

As the controversy raged in 2012 about skyrocketing power prices, the Australian Energy Market Commission (AEMC) concluded that demand management could save between A$4.3 billion and A$11.8 billion over the next ten years.

One of the key reforms the AEMC proposed to unlock these savings was incentives for poles and wires businesses to encourage demand management that would save consumers money.

Better late than never

After much to-ing and fro-ing, the Australian Energy Regulator (AER) is preparing to implement this recommendation.

It recently published a consultation paper on a new Demand Management Incentive Scheme to apply in New South Wales and the ACT in 2019, and then roll out across the National Electricity Market.

The paper focuses on the distribution networks, such as United Energy in Victoria and Ausgrid in NSW, which connect our homes to the electricity grid. It suggests a range of incentives for these businesses to help their customers reduce and shift electricity demand.

An example of the sort of project that would be stimulated is the recently announced Community Grids Project between United Energy and the smart energy startup GreenSync (supported by the Victorian government). This project will encourage households, businesses and community organisations on the lower Mornington Peninsula to voluntarily reduce and/or shift their electricity usage by using solar PV and battery storage systems. In the process, this will defer the need for around A$30 million of investment in new poles and wires.

Network businesses have long been supposed to choose demand management when it costs less than network upgrades, but regulations have discouraged them from doing so. Recent reforms have reduced this bias, but without an effective incentive scheme, demand management is very unlikely to fulfil its potential to cut costs and facilitate renewable energy.

At the Institute for Sustainable Futures (with support from the Australian Renewable Energy Agency) we’re undertaking a detailed study of the regulatory bias against demand management.

It’s not just about networks

While the focus of the scheme is on saving networks money by avoiding or delaying spending on infrastructure, its impact will likely be much more profound.

Network costs make up just under half of total electricity supply costs.

The network demand management incentives will bring forth energy efficiency, load management and local storage and generation resources. These resources can also then be tapped at low extra cost to help balance variations in generation output (for instance, from wind and solar generators) and consumer demand across the whole electricity market.

This will also reduce wholesale energy charges, the need for gas-fired power stations and new transmission links to back up variable wind and solar generators. And by encouraging energy efficiency, demand management will save money while cutting carbon emissions.

Clean energy’s quiet achiever

As global temperature records topple on a monthly basis and the Paris climate agreement bites, the demand for sustainable power becomes irresistible. But as the share of renewable energy rises, the need for flexible resources to balance the variable output of solar and wind power increases.

Even with dramatically falling battery costs, energy storage alone is unlikely to be a viable solution (as highlighted in our study of 100% renewable energy for Kangaroo Island).

It is a little ironic that the missing link for cheap and reliable electricity, which has been staring us in the face for so long, may ultimately also be the key to achieving sustainable power.

Submissions on the AER’s Demand Management Incentive Scheme Consultation Paper close on February 24 2017.

The Conversation

Chris Dunstan is a Research Director at the Institute for Sustainable Futures (ISF) at the University of Technology Sydney. ISF undertakes paid sustainability research for various government, corporate and NGO clients. The Demand Management Incentives Review study was is funded by the Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA), with in kind support from a range of other stakeholders.

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How birds of a feather evolved together

BBC - Thu, 2017-02-02 04:01
Research shows how birds acquired beaks of all shapes and sizes over millions of years of evolution.
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Indian children died after 'eating lychees on empty stomach'

BBC - Thu, 2017-02-02 02:57
Hundreds of children died due to eating the fruit on an empty stomach, research says.
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