Solar and wind energy catch fire

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This was published 11 years ago

Solar and wind energy catch fire

By Peter Hannam

SOLAR and wind-power generation are soaring at home and abroad as falling costs combine with rising prices for fossil-fuel alternatives to reshape electricity markets.

Australians installed about 1 gigawatt of solar photovoltaic (PV) panels on their roofs last year, increasing the existing capacity by more than two-thirds, according to the Australian Solar Council.

Nearly one million Australian rooftops now have solar panels and 62 wind farms are generating power.

Nearly one million Australian rooftops now have solar panels and 62 wind farms are generating power.

The rush to take advantage of generous feed-in tariffs before they were cut saw Queensland more than double its PV sales, adding almost 400 megawatts of capacity in 2012. Victorians also came close to doubling PV capacity, while New South Wales increased capacity by about one-third.

Wholesale prices for solar PV are now down as low as 55¢ per watt from an average of about $7 in 2008, said John Grimes, chief executive of the Australian Solar Council.

''With the degree of competition we have, and with consolidation between manufacturers, I think we will see prices continue at this level for some time,'' he said. ''There is some prospect they will reduce slightly.''

Mr Grimes said 2013 could see PV take-up close to 2012 levels. That estimate compares with the Clean Energy Council's forecast of a pull-back as government solar schemes are wound back or closed.

''Following a bumper year in 2012, we still expect in excess of 500 megawatts of new solar capacity to be added in 2013, with similar figures forecast for 2014 and 2015,'' Russell Marsh, the council's policy director, said.

Ray Wills, an adjunct professor at the School of Earth and Environment at the University of Western Australia, said solar installations in Australia now exceeded 955,000 rooftops and probably would pass 1 million this month. ''Anyone paying more than 25¢ per kilowatt-hour for electricity - and that is most of us - will pay back their investment in less than four years,'' he said.

The rapid growth of solar PV is a worldwide phenomenon as output from Chinese manufacturers soars. Global PV capacity topped 100 gigawatts last year, according to the European Photovoltaic Industry Association.

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''Over its lifetime, [solar PV] is not far away from what people call 'socket parity', or 'grid parity','' Mike Sandiford, director of the Melbourne Energy Institute, said. The convergence of grid and solar prices across Australia is ''going to happen some time mid-decade'', Professor Sandiford said. ''PV [pricing] has been trending down with a 20-25 per cent cost reduction for every doubling of capacity globally.''

Wind energy also continues to expand with worldwide capacity soaring 19 per cent in 2012 as 44.7 gigawatts were added, the Global Wind Energy Council said.

The total of new capacity beat the previous record 40.6 GW installed in 2011 by 10 per cent.

Australia added 358 megawatts of new wind capacity, lifting the total by 16 per cent to 2.584 GW with 62 wind farms in operation.

''Eleven projects are currently under construction and are expected to add another 638 megawatts of capacity in 2013, and approximately 1000 megawatts [will be added] in the following two years,'' said Mr Marsh of the Clean Energy Council.

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