Abbott’s message to renewables: you should be so lucky

Abbott’s message to renewables: you should be so lucky

The renewable energy industry is recognising that there is little hope for a reasonable outcome on the renewable energy target from a government led by Tony Abbott.

This conclusion, if it wasn’t evident before, was reinforced on Monday when government ministers told representatives from the renewable energy industry – which has been at a standstill for nearly two years – that they should consider themselves fortunate for facing just a 40 per cent cut in the renewable energy target.

Industry minister Ian Macfarlane told them "they were lucky" to have received an offer as generous as the one made – his take it or leave it final offer of 32,000GWH – an effective 40 per cent cut to the outstanding target.

According to some of those present, Macfarlane told the industry that he couldn’t guarantee that even the offer of 32,000GWh would be accepted by Cabinet, given the fierce resistance to the RET within Cabinet ranks.

The overwhelming sense of those in the room was that the agenda was still being driven by the Prime Minister’s office, the same one that appointed climate denier and pro-nuclear advocate Dick Warburton to head the RET review, and which has appointed other climate deniers to head inquiries into banking and the commission of audit, and to head its business advisory panel.

As we reported on Monday, the take-it-or-leave-it offer from Macfarlane and environment minister Greg Hunt has left the industry in a dilemma: accept a much reduced target that many say will cripple the industry, or endure more months of uncertainty – and no investment – in the hope that a better deal can be obtained down the track.

The question is, with whom? Cabinet is known to be hostile, given their individual hatred of wind farms, distrust of solar, and refusal to accept climate science. Macfarlane noted that the Coalition had started out with a 21,000GWh offer, effectively bringing renewables to an immediate halt; then 26,000GWh, then 28,000GWh, then 31,000GWh, and now 32,000GWh.

Macfarlane, who oversaw the scrapping of the previous scheme under the Howard government, appeared to contradict Hunt when the latter suggested there was still room for negotiation.

Hunt has been complaining to the industry that he is not being recognised for his efforts on the RET, often telling the clean energy industry that he is the “only friend they have got” in the federal Coalition.

And he may well be right, but that speaks more about the dire situation in Cabinet than it does of Hunt's own advocacy.

Last week, RenewEconomy wrote a piece highlighting some of the biggest whoppers spoken by the Abbott government on the renewables target. And they added another on Monday.

Macfarlane told the meeting that planning restrictions would prevent enough wind farms being built, possibly ignoring the fact that the new Victorian government has wound back that state's restrictive laws. As if on signal, the Northern Grampians shire council this week voted unanimously to approve the proposed 69 turbine, 200MW and $465 million Bulgana wind farm.

Hunt went further. He told Sky News that even building enough capacity to meet a 33,000GWh target would not be possible, and he claimed that the Climate Change Authority had said as much.

DAVID SPEERS:

So what’s wrong with the 35,000 gigawatt hours? (the minimum proposed by Labor)

GREG HUNT:

Well the problem with going to a figure which simply can’t be built out, which can’t be achieved with actual construction over the next five years, is that you end up hitting what’s called a penalty, if you don’t build it all there’s a penalty and that penalty takes the form of a carbon tax equivalent four times higher, at $93 a tonne...

DAVID SPEERS:

And you believe that’s the case with 35,000 - that it cannot be achieved without...

GREG HUNT:

Yes I do, I really do. And indeed the Climate Change Authority said that they thought the figure of 33,000 was the absolute maximum that could possibly be built by the industry by 2020.

Actually, the CCA said nothing of the sort.

The CCA, in its report last year, recognised there was debate about whether the 41,000GWh could be met because of the policy uncertainty (caused by the Coalition government's review) – the industry says it can meet the target, the coal-fired generators and others with a vested interest in slowing down renewables says they can't.

So to avoid any bottlenecks, the CCA suggested two alternative trajectories: a two-year delay that would have an effective 34,672GWh target by 2020, with 41,000GWh reach in 2022; and a three year delay which would have a 33,091GWh target by 2020, with 41,000GWh reached in 2023. (See graph below).

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Dr Lex Fullarton

Adjunct Professor at Curtin Law School Curtin University

10 年

I think you will find the fiscal driver is that the fossil fuel industry is faced with redundant assets. Simply put they will not receive the same Internal Rate of Return from their power stations if renewables displace them. It is not rocket dentistry - it is simply a case of an industry protecting itself from competition. The slave traders, tobacco companies and asbestos miners did the same thing. They simply view profit and forget society or the environment. What they are doing may be profitable but it is just wrong in today's society.

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John Nistler

Renewable Energy

10 年

Patrick, a good question. Not living in Australia I am having a hard time understanding the issue. As I understand, Australians are installing solar at a record pace. Distributed Vertical Axis Wind turbines should also be moving at an incredible pace. Overall costs are coming down quickly, making investment even more attractive with 25 year warranties and high sunlight to useable power conversion efficiencies. Is an import tax or duty being added to try and slow down solar as the USA Dept of Commerce is doing - going on. Or are their other factors. I say lets open this up. Contact my group and we will help as many Australians as want to with do it yourself installable PVac and Smartwind systems. I think we Texans would love coming down to Australia!

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Roslyn Taylor

Director, Sums and Solutions & ASE | BAS Agent | Dip.of Bus. | Professional Bookkeeper | Energy Solutions Innovator Let’s connect to discuss bookkeeping, BAS services, or energy-efficient solutions for your needs!

10 年

Current Government is trying to kill my business. Why I ask? One theory I have is that by getting rid of companies like mine will give time to coal and power companies to adjust their business plans so they can incorporate and or expand renewable energy into their future plans. We already see power companies like AGL selling solar power. At the end of the day the people of Australia are who decides where we head.Consumers are still putting solar power and solar hot water on their shopping lists. The Government cannot dictate what the private sector does but it is certainly trying hard to kill off renewable energy companies and influence consumers.I guess until the sun and wind can be taxed nothing much will happen in this sector by current Government.

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Barrie Harrop

Executive Chairman | Barrie Harrop

10 年

Aust PM living in some kind of time warp on renewable energy.

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