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Australian states outpacing feds with solar, wind plans — report
2021/2/23 11:02:45
Tags:solar  wind  Australian   article from solar star
http://guangfu.bjx.com.cn/news/en/20170904/513546.shtml

“States territories are driving the Australian  energy transition in the absence of federal policy,” the Climate Council says in its new report, Renewables Ready: States Leading the charge.

In particular, the authorities in the Australian Capital Territory (ACT), South Australia Tasmania have been aggressively pushing forward with plans to ramp up solar  wind  capacity. But the Climate Council believes that large-scale PV wind deployment will also start to rise significantly in New South Wales Queensl this year.

“The federal government remains stuck at the starting block,” laments the Sydney-based, independent non-profit organization. “In the absence of national energy climate policy, all states territories (except Western Australia) now have strong renewable energy targets /or net zero emissions targets in place.”’

The Climate Council believes that those state-level goals — as well as plans to close down a number of coal-fired plants — mean that nationwide greenhouse gas emissions will likely fall by 26% to 28% by 2030, as targeted.

The ACT, Tasmania South Australia have already installed more non-hydro renewables capacity per capita than Western Australia, Victoria, New South Wales, Queensl the Northern Territory. However, Queensl, South Australia Western Australia are the states with the highest amount of installed residential PV capacity.

“Energy storage is increasingly coming to the fore as part of state territory energy policy,” the Climate Council adds, noting that the biggest solar battery storage plant in the world is now being built in South Australia.

A number of massive PV projects supply orders have been announced in Australia in recent weeks. In late August, for example, oil giant Shell revealed that it has started to evaluate the feasibility of building a 250 MW solar installation in the Western Downs region of Queensl. Several weeks prior to that announcement, First Solar revealed that it was on track to supply 241 MW of its thin-film solar modules for Edify Energy’s 180.7 MW Daydream 60.2 MW Hayman PV projects in Queensl.

Australia’s cumulative installed PV capacity reached 5.2 GW at the end of 2016, up roughly 19% year on year, according to the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA). The country wants renewables to account for 23.5% of its energy mix by the end of the decade, which equates to 33,000 GWh of annual electricity generation.



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