| |   |  Rooftop solar meets all of South Australia demand in major new milestone
   Giles Parkinson24 September 2023
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  The  milestones continue to fall in Australia’s rapidly evolving   electricity grid, with rooftop solar meeting all of South Australia’s   native or underlying demand in the early afternoon on Saturday.
  The  milestone was noted by a number of energy analysts and date  providers,  including Watt Clarity and GPE NEMLog2, which provided the  graph below  and which said rooftop solar peaked at 101 per cent of state  demand at  13.55pm on Saturday.
  At the time, renewables contributed around  114 per cent of the  state’s demand, exporting most of the excess while  some went into  storage, and a significant amount was curtailed due to  negative prices.  The new milestone beat the previous peak for rooftop solar of 99.2 per cent recorded a week earlier.
  Such  milestone are significant for a number of reasons. Firstly,  because  you don’t have to go too many years back to find people saying  that  such a milestone would be impossible without the lights going off.  They  didn’t.
  Secondly, it underlines the fundamental shift in the way  that grids  are managed. It means the end of baseload, because variable  renewables  such as wind and solar make the business case for such  technologies  largely redundant. The focus is now on renewables and  “firming” and  “flexible” technologies to meet demand.
  South  Australia is ahead of other states in Australia and the world,  at least  for grids of its size. The last coal generator was shut in  2016, the  remaining gas plants no longer operate in “baseload” mode, and  battery  storage – first introduced in 2017 – is now rapidly expanding.
    
  Rooftop  solar presents interesting challenges for the market operator  to  maintain security of the grid, because it leaves it with few levers  to  control. But the introduction of synchronous condensers and the  growth  of battery storage, plus the ability to “orchestrate” growing  amounts  of rooftop solar is making it more comfortable.
  For now, it keeps  two gas units running at low capacity to maintain  grid security, but  that need will be redundant once the new link to NSW  is completed in a  few years time.
  The main challenge then will be creating new  demand in the middle of  the day to soak up the still growing amounts of  rooftop solar. This  could come from storage, new industrial demand,  shifting hot water  services, and green hydrogen production.
  The  state is soon to announce the winning tenders of its hydrogen   electrolyser and hydrogen power station in Whyalla, which could end up   being a major “solar soak” in the middle of the day.
  In Western  Australia, which has no links to other grid, so cannot  export excess  capacity, the state government has commissioned a series  of giant  batteries contracted to the specific task of soaking up solar  in the  middle of the day and time shifting the output to the evening  peak.
  But  even these contracts are only for a short period, because the  state  expects the growth of industrial electrification to also soak up  solar  in the middle of the day as green hydrogen production grows and  other  big industries such as refineries look to green energy to deliver  zero  carbon products to the international market.
  The rooftop solar record wasn’t the only one to fall on the weekend.
  According  to GPE NEMLog2, other records to fall included record  instantaneous  battery charge in South Australia (334.7 MW earlier on  Saturday at  10.30am), Victoria battery charge (390 MW), and record  NEM-wide battery  charge of 594.8 MW at 2.50pm (AEST) on Saturday.
  In NSW, battery discharge hit a record 174.5 MW at 6.30pm on Saturday.
  Other  records included instantaneous wind output in Queensland  (842MW), at  the same time as a record amount of wind curtailment  (854.7MW), and a  record wind share (15.9 per cent).
  Also in NSW, black coal output  hit a record low of 2,073.0 MW at  13:55 hrs on Saturday, and coal and  gas together hit a new record low of  2,073.2 MW at the same time.
   reneweconomy.com.au |  
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