On 2022-01-31 13:34, Roger Clarke wrote:
> Great as all of these developments are, it's best not to lapse into 
> marketing-spruik.
> 
> It *might* be zero-marginal-cost.
> 
> But I'd be surprised if there aren't a few variable costs in there.
> 
> And of course original investment in infrastructure has to be 'paid off' [...]

To which I'd add the National Electricity Market (NEM) rules probably need 
critical review in the light of greenhouse warming and current "green" 
technology, together with all relevant State & Federal legislation and 
especially the tax rules.

At the moment it's probably not worth installing PV panels on an ordinary 
domestic rooftop unless one has a full-electric or plug-in hybrid car or in 
other special cases, and I don't think I'd connect it to the grid either since 
the feed-in tariff is negligible and the distributors want control..  (Are we 
going to find out the hard way about providing energy for Australia's growing 
fleet of electric vehicles, both private and light commercial?)  Even domestic 
hot water is probably cheaper using a conventional off-peak supply, and I've 
noticed my own is sometimes switched on during the day presumably to balance 
supply & demand.

IMO the "Snowy 2.0" scheme may prove to be an expensive, risky, and rather 
inefficient way of reducing our greenhouse load as pumped hydro can probably be 
done more effectively on a distributed basis using seawater where that's 
possible.

Melbourne Energy Institute at the University of Melbourne & Arup-MEI Research 
published a study of pumped-hydro generation which I forwarded to the 
appropriate SA Minister when the Government of the time appeared to be 
receiving the full blast of a misinformation campaign about the supposed 
"unreliability" of sun & wind when the "wind doesn't blow and the sun doesn't 
shine".  And this with pictures of transmission towers bent double after a gale!

It's a 99-page document, which includes cost modelling.  It also includes a map 
of possible small scale pumped hydro installations using sea water around the 
Eyre & Yorke Peninsulas, following inspection of such an installation in Japan. 
 I see the original has been archived, but I should be able to find my copy if 
anyone's interested.

All the best to Linkers for 2022!
David Lochrin

(PS: I apologise for my previous post, sent in error.  Link Moderator, would 
you please delete it?)


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