| Australia could be 100% renewable by 2030s, meet Paris targets by 2025 
 Sophie Vorrath
 
 10 September 2018
 
 Comments
 
 
  
 Australia could reach the equivalent of 100  per cent renewables for  its electricity needs by the early 2030s by  doing nothing more than  maintaining the current pace of wind and solar  development, a new  research report has found.
 
 The report   – published by a heavy-hitting team of Australian National University   researchers, including solar PV and pumped hydro expert Andrew Blakers –   says keeping up the current rate of renewable energy deployment would   also meet Australia’s entire emissions reduction task “for the whole   economy” by 2025.
 
 
  
 To   reach these conclusions, the team analysed data for the federal   government’s own Clean Energy Regulator, showing that during 2018 and   2019 the nation would install about 10,400MW of new renewable energy.
 
 ANU  Energy Change Institute director Professor Ken Baldwin said that  at  that rate, Australia would eclipse the Renewable Energy Target,   reaching 29 per cent in 2020, and by 2025 would reach 50 per cent – a   number the federal Coalition likes to say is “recklessly high”, even for   2030.
 
 Perhaps even more importantly, staying on the current  trajectory  would see electricity sector emissions reduced by 26 per  cent in 2021,  and the Paris economy-wide emissions reductions target of  26 per cent  met five years early, in 2025.
 
 
 
  
 It’s an impressive set of numbers, particularly considering that just three years ago,   much the same ANU team forecast that Australia could reach 100 per cent renewables by 2040 by adding just under 4GW (4,000MW) of wind and solar capacity a year.
 
 The upwards revision could be partly due to what the report calls “an   important recent development:” the rapid growth in deployment of solar   PV on the roofs of commercial and industrial enterprises (see Figure 6,   below).
 
 
  
 The ANU forecast   compares to recent modelling from the Australian Energy Market Operator,   which shows renewables making up 46 per cent of NEM generation by 2030   in their “neutral scenario”, and 61 per cent of generation by 2030 in   their “fast change” scenario.
 
 But while the ANU experts have  every faith in the renewable energy  industry – and the technology – to  get the job done, they have their  doubts about the politics, which at a  federal level is now more  uncertain than ever for investors in solar  and wind.
 
 “Australian industry is proving it’s not difficult or  expensive to  make deep and rapid cuts to greenhouse gas emissions,”  said Baldwin in  comments on the report on Monday.
 
 “All the  evidence points to Australia’s capacity to be a renewable  energy  superpower, with all the economic and environmental benefits that  come  with that.
 
 “We need Australia’s governments to put in place the  right plans for the renewable energy train to have a smooth ride,” he  said.
 
 “The remaining piece of the puzzle is more storage and  stronger  interstate interconnection, which is where governments should  be  focussing their attention,” said Dr Matthew Stocks, from ANU  Research  School of Engineering
 
 “Pumped hydro storage – such as  the proposed Snowy 2.0 – is  off-the-shelf technology, while batteries  are rapidly falling in price.
 
 “Our message is that the renewables train has developed great momentum, so policy makers need to get on board,” said Dr Stocks.
 
 reneweconomy.com.au
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