The damn renewables shafting consumers once again....
not so much the renewables, but the
subsidies that taxpayers have to fund to get them off the ground and keep them viable...
and when i say viable, it's not like they provide anywhere near the capacity, reliability or wholesale cheapness of the power provided by coal.
it's the subsidies that hurt taxpayers...
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/state-politics/queensland-taxpayers-kept-in-dark-as-they-prop-up-solar-firms/news-story/04eefc1e8a2520c25e83d63306e9b896(bold emphasis added by me)...
The Queensland government is concealing its financial support for large-scale renewable energy projects, guaranteeing subsidies to solar companies that do not appear on balance sheets.
With an expert panel previously finding the government would need to spend between $500 million and $900m in subsidies to meet its 50 per cent renewable energy target by 2030, there are now calls for spending to be made public.
The government has struck four deals with major solar-farm developers, under “contracts for difference”, with floor prices nominated for the sale of their energy in order to attract finance. When the market price falls below that threshold, the government has to make up the difference.
one commenter spells it out in plain english (
date added by me for comment reference and context):
Yesterday (June 6, 2018) at 9 am Qld.. was generating 7,000 MW from fossil fuels/hydro and 80 MW from windmills and solar panels which is typical of Qld's power mix over the last couple of months. At the same time Qld has been exporting +/- 1,000 MW of excess power to Southern States to make up for power shortages caused by the closure of VICs. Hazelwood.
Two of Qld's "large scale" solar projects — Genex’s Kidston and Canadian Solar’s Longreach solar farms, which have capacities of 50 megawatts and 15MW respectively — have begun feeding into the grid. These capacities are nameplate ratings only if they run 24/7/365, which of course they cannot, especially at night. The real ratings of these two baby power projects is more like 12.5 MW and 3.75 MW respectively which are definitely not large scale.
QLD has a long way to go to reach the 3,000 MW, 50% target of intermittent energy by 2030, but it will still need 3,000 MW of fossil fuel backup for when the wind and sun go missing. BTW the 3,000 MW represents energy produced not nameplate ratings which is a capacity factor of 25%.
if renewables are so good, why do they need subsidies to remain viable?
if renewable energy companies are so confident in their product, then fund and build without taxpayer-funded subsidies... go your hardest...
to be clear, i have no issue with renewables providing power (i really don't care where my power comes from), but i do have a problem with:
power prices going up for no good reason, when we have the ability and resources to provide cheap, plentiful and reliable power for hundreds of years at our disposal, today.
governments pushing for renewables,
at the expense of people's costs of living, to try and mitigate something that has yet to be proven conclusively and something that we may have absolutely no control over (despite what the 'models' tell us), and
to be treated like some kind of a moron when i (or anyone else) suggest that we could have an orderly transition to renewable power,
when the technology is ready.
common sense dictates that we could have a sensible, middle ground...