| Wind and solar smash grid market share records, even after heavy curtailment, coal at new low 
 
  Golden Plains wind farm. Image: TagEnergy.
 
 Giles Parkinson
 
 Oct 11, 2025
 
 Chart of the day
 Coal
 Renewables
 Solar
 Wind
 
 
 Wind and solar energy smashed their market share records on Saturday,   even after heavy curtailment that dragged back their potential output   from meeting more than 113 per cent of grid demand to just below 80 per   cent.
 
 According to GPE NEMLog, the share of renewables hit a  new peak of  79.8 per cent at 11 am (AEST) on Saturday, courtesy of  strong winds  affecting southern Australia, and the new found ability of  some big coal  units to dial down their output significantly, or even  switch off  altogether.
 
 According to GPE’s Geoff Eldridge,  the share of variable renewables –  large scale wind and solar and  rooftop PV – reached a new peak of 77.1  per cent, beating the previous  record of 75.9 per cent in late  September.
 
 What is more  remarkable is that the peak was reached mostly with  rooftop solar,  which more large scale wind and solar curtailed rather  than actually  delivered to the grid – most likely due to economic  reasons because of  negative wholesale prices, but perhaps also due to  network constraints.
 
 The curtailed wind and solar alone accounted for around one third of   underlying demand, meaning that the “potential” share of renewable was   more than 113 per cent at the time – also a record.
 
 The  Australian Energy Market Operator has said that it is preparing  for the  day when it is able to manage the grid with up to 100 per cent   instantaneous penetration of renewables.
 
 It had hope to be  able to deliver that by 2025, but it appears that  not all its  engineering ducks have been lined up – it most likely needs  more  synchronous condensers, and grid forming batteries, that will  together  supply the “system strength” normally provided by coal fired   generators.
 
 And it is doubtful that the owners of some coal  fired generators will  want to switch them off completely.  Some of them  now can, and do,  which led to a record low share of coal of just 20.4  per cent around the  same time.
 
 Some coal generators have  learned to flex to just 20 per cent of  their rated output to dance  around the impact of rooftop solar, and AGL  has been “two-shifting” one  of its units at Bayswater – switching them  off for a whole “shift” in  the middle of the day – as it appears to have  done again on both Friday  and Saturday
 
 reneweconomy.com.au
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