Skip to navigationSkip to contentSkip to footerHelp using this website - Accessibility statement
  • Advertisement
    Policy

    Energy & Climate

    Yesterday

    Victoria needs new gas after all, state Labor admits

    In March, Energy Minister Lily D’Ambrosio said the state had enough electricity to cover winter shortfalls. On Thursday, she conceded that it needed new gas supplies.

    • Gus McCubbing
    Origin Energy’s Eraring power station.

    Fears Eraring subsidies will need to be extended

    Keeping the country’s biggest coal-fired power station open until 2027 has raised questions about whether it will be needed to keep the lights on into the 2030s.

    • Updated
    • Ben Potter and Elouise Fowler

    With patient capital, Australia could make solar panels

    This country can make good quality panels. The doubts lie with Australian governments’ and capital markets’ willingness to allocate the billions of dollars, year after year.

    • Tristan Edis

    This Month

    Santos chief executive Kevin Gallagher and Shell Australia chair Cecile Wake at the Australian Energy Producers’ conference in Perth.

    Subsidy wars: Carbon capture cost adds up for fertiliser maker

    Carbon capture and storage would add 50 per cent to the cost of producing ammonia in the Pilbara, making it uneconomic without further government support.

    • Ben Potter
    Peter Dutton remains committed to nuclear power.

    Our cheapest, most efficient nuclear fusion reactor is the sun

    Readers’ letters on nuclear energy; the role of drugs and alcohol in family violence; fat-cat university vice chancellors; an alternative Bonza outcome; Singapore’s new leader; and Alexander Downer’s columns.

    Advertisement
    Nuclear power is part of the landscape in 32 countries.

    Cut through the noise on nuclear power

    It’s a mistake to flatly rule out nuclear power when the final cost of a fully renewable system is also far from clear.

    • Michael Brear and Chris Greig
    From left, Woodside boss Meg O’Neill; Resources minister Madeleine King, and Peter Cosgrove at the Australian Energy Producers conference in Perth.

    Woodside eyes data centres to justify hydrogen bet

    Woodside is looking to data centres’ hunger for green power as a potential solution to the problem of finding customers willing to justify the oil and gas giant’s  commercial-scale bet on green hydrogen.

    • Ben Potter
    Part of the $2.3 billion EnergyConnect transmission line being built between SA and NSW. Photo: ElectraNet

    Risk of summer blackouts in NSW, Victoria rises

    Power users face an increased risk of summer shortages in NSW and Victoria due to delays in transmission lines and renewable projects, and large users may need to switch off plants to avoid blackouts.

    • Ben Potter
    The scale of the risks are such that a reckless mis-step could result in serious blackouts and imperil the social licence needed to navigate the already challenging process of decarbonisation.

    Keeping Eraring open is about engineering not morality

    The imminent decision around when to close Australia’s biggest coal-fired power station is a watershed moment between an ideological approach to climate change and the laws of physics.

    • Matthew Warren
    Maia Schweizer,COO  Sundrive, and Vince Allen, founder and CEO

    Critics say Aussies can’t make cheap solar panels. This start-up says they’re wrong

    The brains behind SunDrive say Australia has the material, the best resources, and even national security reasons, for keeping solar panel expertise here.

    • Ben Potter
    Michael Myer, chairman of Sunshine Hydro, at site of its proposed Djandori 300 MW green hydrogen project south of Gladstone, Qld.

    Hydrogen credit could blow its $6.7b budget

    Sunshine Hydro chairman Michael Myer says international investment could mean the cost of the budget measure blows out, but is still worth the benefits.

    • Ben Potter
    Brian Craighead, founder of Energy Renaissance, says the $523 million budget “battery breakthrough” funding can help Australia’s only lithium ion battery maker expoand sufficiently to underwrite a massive expansion in critical minerals. Photo: Louie Douvis

    The game changer on battery-making is still to come

    The founder of Australia’s only lithium-ion battery-maker says a $523 million budget boost will help underwrite a boom in critical minerals.

    • Ben Potter

    This could be the biggest local energy shake-up since the late ’70s

    The budget leg-up for the ‘Future Made in Australia’ through green metals is ultimately about shoring up Labor’s electoral base.

    • Andrew Clark
    The Australian Renewable Energy Agency is a big winner from the federal budget.

    Arena to receive $5.1b to back renewable energy

    A big winner is the Australian Renewable Energy Agency, a body threatened with abolition a decade ago.

    • Ben Potter

    Blue-sky thinkers block the sun to fight climate change

    It might sound like science fiction, but a mix of scientists and venture capitalists are working on plans to block the sun to slow global warming.

    • Peter Ker and Lap Phan
    Advertisement
    International Energy Agency executive director Fatih Birol.

    The world’s wiliest climate warrior? It’s not who you think

    International Energy Agency boss Fatih Birol, a lifelong bureaucrat with roots in the oil industry, has made the net zero transition a personal mission.

    • Hans van Leeuwen
    International Energy Agency executive director Fatih Birol.

    Australia doesn’t need nukes: International Energy Agency boss

    Global energy tsar Fatih Birol says Australia should play to its strengths in renewables, and there should be less emotion and politics in energy discussions.

    • Hans van Leeuwen
    Gas for power generation is far from cooked.

    Labor locks gas firmly into energy transition

    The Future Gas Strategy reaffirms a strong role for gas, but despite the title it is light on ideas to get there.

    • The AFR View
    Exploratory gas well on Tanumburini Station which is part of a gas exploration and production process in the Beetaloo Basin in the Northern Territory.

    ANZ hardens policy against bankrolling oil and gas projects

    The bank says it will “no longer provide direct financing to new or expansion upstream” projects, practically ruling out lending to the largest proposals.

    • Ben Potter
    Resources Minister Madeleine King: Turning off gas overnight would do untold damage to our economy.

    We will need new sources of gas

    Australia is committed to reaching net zero emissions by 2050, and we will need gas to get there.

    • Madeleine King