NSW sets new long duration storage target as it readies for grid after coal  
      Huge transformer en route to the Eraring battery. Photo courtesy of Origin Energy.      Rachel Williamson
  Oct 18, 2024  
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    The New South Wales (NSW) Labor government has announced a new target   for long duration storage as it prepares the country’s biggest state   grid for life after coal.
      The state has already set a target  of 16 gigawatt hours of long  duration storage by 2030, but to help fill  the gaps between wind and  solar output, and shorter duration storage,  it has now announced a new  target of an additional 12 GWh by 2034.
       The announcement comes as state energy minister Penny Sharpe   announced that the government would not reduced the eight-hour   requirement for long duration energy storage, as had been mooted in   recent months.
       In a speech to long durations storage  developments at state  parliament on Thursday night, Sharpe says the  government has chosen to  set a new target based on eight hour storage  rather than fiddling with  the terminology.
      “We recently  carried out a review into the long-duration storage  needs for NSW and  have been consulting on potential legislative changes  regarding  long-duration storage,” Sharpe said.
      “This additional target  [of 12 GWh by 2034] will provide a clear  signal for investors and  demonstrates that NSW is committed to  supporting more long duration  storage over the long-term. 
      “We know many of these projects  are complex and have long lead-times.  We’re committed to supporting  this important sector – we’re in it for  the long haul.”
      The  20340 date is significant because it is around that time that the  last  of the state’s four coal generators could be retiring, although  units  at Bayswater and Mt Piper could remain on a seasonal basis. But  more  storage, as well as significantly more bulk energy supply in the  form  of wind and solar will be needed.
      Part of the problem is that  long duration energy storage is more  expensive than similar technology  running at shorter durations, and the  full capacity is less often  used. 
       Pumped hydro, which is likely to be needed to meet  the state’s  legislated targets, has found the market particularly  challenging  despite the eight-hour duration requirement. 
       The technology struggles to compete with lithium ion batteries on   price, as it takes longer to build and has higher upfront capital costs,   and it has less flexibility to operate in multiple energy markets.
       Lithium ion battery projects have stolen the thunder and three   lithium ion battery projects – each boasting eight hours of storage –   have been awarded underwriting agreements, known as Long Term Energy   Supply Agreements, or LTESAs, in the auctions so far. A compressed air   storage facility at Broken Hill has also won an LTESA contract.
       Numerous pumped hydro projects, proposed by the likes of AGL,   EnergyAustralia and Atco, as long as some longer term projects such as   those proposed by former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull, have been   pushing for tender mechanisms that would make it easier for their   technologies to compete.
      In November last year, the NSW government   flagged   that its then-proposed Energy Services Corporation could somehow act  to  de-risk pumped hydro projects. Details of how that would work are  yet  to be rolled out.
   reneweconomy.com.au |