Australia’s main grid hits new renewable energy record of 50.4 per cent

By Giles Parkinson 7th September 2020
https://reneweconomy.com.au/australias-main-grid-hits-new-renewable-energy-record-of-50-4-per-cent-12567/


It’s the season of new records, and the most notable one in a week of new 
milestones in Australia’s main electricity grids is a new peak for renewable 
energy share in the National Electricity Market: It reached 50.4 per cent at 
10.55am on Monday.

It also likely the first time that the combined output of wind and solar was 
more than that of black and brown coal, traditionally the dirty bed-rock’s of 
Australia’s electricity supply.

Rooftop solar provided 24.6 per cent of supply at 10.55am, utility scale solar 
10.1 per cent and wind energy 13.5 per cent. Together, they totalled 48.2 per 
cent, and the percentages might have been higher had not some wind and solar 
farms decided to switch off to duck negative pricing events.

Even so, wind and solar – possibly for the first time – beat black and brown 
coal which made up 47.4 per cent of the generation mix.

Australia is expected to set more renewable energy and minimum demand records 
in coming weeks – a combination of good wind and solar conditions, mild 
temperatures, and relatively low demand, reduced further by the impacts of the 
Covid-19 pandemic.

It has already set several records for “minimum demand” – effectively the 
amount of grid demand left after substracting rooftop solar” – in states such 
as Western Australia, South Australia and Victoria last week.

W.A., thanks to two new big wind farms, Yandin (the state’s biggest at 212MW) 
and Warradarge, also set a wind output share of 44 per cent on Monday, also 
thought to be a record.



Giles Parkinson is founder and editor of Renew Economy. Giles has been a 
journalist for 35 years and is a former business and deputy editor of the 
Australian Financial Review.
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