Fri. Nov 15th, 2024
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Australia’s oldest coal-fired power plant has been shut down, as the country – a once-notorious climate straggler – prepares for a seismic shift towards renewable energy.

The Liddell power station, a three-hour drive north of Sydney, was one in a series of ageing coal-fired plants slated to close in the coming years.

Built in 1971, Liddell provided about 10 percent of the electricity used in New South Wales, Australia’s most populous state.

Liddell’s owner AGL said on Friday it would take about two years to demolish the hulking facility, which would free up the site for new clean energy projects such as a hydrogen power plant.

“More than 90 percent of the materials in the power station will be recycled, including 70,000 tonnes of steel – which is more steel than there is in the Sydney Harbour Bridge,” the company said.

For decades, coal has provided the bulk of Australia’s electricity, but University of New South Wales renewable energy expert Mark Diesendorf told the AFP news agency that stations such as Liddell were fast becoming unreliable “clunkers”.

Besides being inefficient, highly polluting and expensive to repair, the continued widespread use of coal-fired power plants would make Australia’s climate targets almost impossible to meet.

Australia has long been one of the world’s largest coal producers and exporters, and a series of governments have resisted pressure to scale back the industry.

But the centre-left Labor Party elected last year on the promise of climate action has pledged that 82 percent of the country’s electricity will come from renewable sources by 2030.

This demands a drastic overhaul – while world leaders such as Norway produce more than 90 percent of their power through renewables, Australia currently sits at only about 30 percent.

“The plans are for a fairly rapid phase-out,” Diesendorf told AFP.

“These stations are overdue for retirement and there’s no economic argument for replacing them with new coal.”

Under growing public pressure to address the climate crisis, many Australian fossil fuel companies increasingly prefer to shutter old coal plants than keep them online.

Australia’s largest coal-fired power station, the Eraring facility in New South Wales, is scheduled to close in 2025 and a handful more will follow over the next decade.

While these closures will test whether renewables are ready to fill the gap, a government report released on Friday indicated Australia was heading in the right direction.

The Australian Energy Market Operator found that record levels of renewable electricity – mostly solar power – were already driving down both emissions and household power prices.

Drenched in sunshine and blessed with sparsely-populated windswept coasts, Australia has the natural ingredients to be a renewable energy superpower, climate finance expert Tim Buckley told AFP.

“Every bloody week there’s a new battery announced, or a new wind farm, or other major projects proceeding,” he said.

The tricky part, he added, would be figuring out how to store this energy and pump it across the vast distances between Australian towns and cities.

“We are talking about projects that haven’t been attempted in Australia for decades, where labour shortages are real and engineering problems are to be expected.

“The chance of everything going smoothly between now and 2030 is close to zero.”

Even if it does go smoothly, Australia still faces enormous challenges in meeting its target of reaching net-zero emissions by 2050.

Over the past decade, an ideological brawl dubbed the “climate wars” has dominated Australian politics, repeatedly undermining attempts to reduce carbon emissions.

Researchers in 2020 found that 8 percent of Australians were in climate change denial, more than double the global average.

And although Australia is planning to clean up its domestic energy market, the economy is still fuelled by exports of coal and gas.

Dozens of new coal mines, oil fields and gas projects are in government planning pipelines.

“In terms of still developing gas and coal mines for export, we are a terrible laggard,” Diesendorf said. “It’s a real contradiction.”

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