⚛️ why #nuclear power is a distraction for australia
if implemented, the #coalition's plan would see:
• increased gas & coal usage
• increased cost
• increased emissions
• higher chance of blackouts
read on to find out why… 🧵
firstly, let me say i have a deep interest in nuclear.
i've visited multiple nuclear plants, met with companies planning to build SMRs and nuclear VCs, taken a nuclear course at @MIT and closely watched the sector for years.
i encourage the use of nuclear where it makes sense.
some context: nuclear has had a long history of nothing in australia, including the start of construction in jervis bay (promptly cancelled by a liberal PM) and a federal ban (under a liberal PM).
important to note there are also state bans, including in NSW, VIC & QLD.
those who say "we need to have a mature conversation" about nuclear must have missed the *six* inquiries held since 2006, including a royal commission.
hundreds of submissions, thousand of pages of expert reports, transcripts and analyses.
the fact is that every time the #coalition has no serious policy, they opt for a pre-commercial technology they have no intention of delivering.
…whether that's carbon capture & storage #CCS, "HELE clean coal" or small modular reactors #SMRs.
it's deja vu, all over again
the transition of our power grid is well underway.
12yrs ago the NEM was ~10% renewable & included 27 coal power stations. almost 1/2 have closed.
we're now up to ~40% RE.
AEMO's 4th #ISP projects ~95% RE 12 years from now, with all but one coal power stations closed.
we're moving at such a pace that it's clear that #nuclear has missed _this_ energy transition.
…there are 4 key barriers to #nuclear in #australia…
1. availability.
firstly, commercial SMRs do not exist.
yes, there are nuclear subs plying the ocean, a pair of small reactors on a barge in russia's arctic circle and a pair of pilot reactors in china… but none are commercially viable.
nothing commercial before the 2030s.
yes, we could build large reactors, but they're not fast nor cheap.
of the 5 nuclear power projects to start construction this century in north america & western europe, one was cancelled and the others will average 21 years from announcement to commercial operation.
this plant, VS summer in south carolina, was cancelled after US$10bn spent.
the utility company folded and the CEO and COO are serving time in jail for lying to regulators.
hinkley point C, in the UK, will be ~24 years from the project announcement to commercial operation… and the cost has blown out to ~A$90bn.
its wholesale cost of power is A$250/MWh… or 2.5x as much as the average in australia over the past 5 years.
you'll see people claim it takes 3 years, or 6 or 10, to build a nuclear power station, but that's usually just the time from pouring first 'nuclear concrete' to first grid connection in countries with mature and warm nuclear supply chains — and excludes many many prerequisites.
i'm not saying it has to take 24 years to build a nuke in australia… but there's really no way we could have our first nuclear kilowatt hour in australia before 2040, and that's a very ambitious timeframe.
2. extraordinary cost.
we have the world's best resources of wind & solar. much lower than most nuclear countries.
CSIRO's estimates that the costs of SMRs would yield energy for ~20c/kWh more than a high-renewables scenario.
nuclear — big & small — is uneconomic in 🇦🇺.
3. intractable politics
the greens, implacably opposed, hold the balance of power. many in labor will die on the same hill — the party wouldn't risk a schism.
i bet labor strategists want the coalition to talk about nuclear energy every day between now and the next election.
polling shows:
• nuclear is almost as unpopular as coal
• coalition voters prefer renewables over nuclear
• a significant number of coalition voters dislike nuclear.
oh, it's also banned in NSW, VIC & QLD — ie. it's a state _and_ federal issue.
4. suitability for our grid
this is the last week in the national electricity market… turquoise = renewables, black = fossils.
that's at ~40% RE… there's some room in that grid for "baseload" generation (in NSW, VIC or QLD).
but that's 2024…
here's a slightly different view of SA over the same period, with ~70% RE.
turquoise = wind and solar, purple = residual demand.
residual demand, "everything else", must be filled with dispatchable power.
this is the same chart, but showing just residual demand. it's very spiky.
the whole NEM will look like this by ~2030 — though the spikes will get skinnier and sparser as renewables and storage increase through the decade.
nuclear wants to supply flat, constant power.
yes, nuclear can theoretically work at a low level in a grid with spiky residual demand… but it's _really_ challenging to operate that way and it smashes the economics.
the #coalition hasn't detailed its plans, but we know this:
• @tedobrienmp objects to the 82% renewable energy target.
• @D_LittleproudMP supports a moratorium on utility-scale wind & solar.
so, what'd happen if we had a moratorium on utility RE?
my wish for you all today is that you’re not seated at xmas dinner next to your uncle who wants to convince you that australia needs to go #nuclear. ☢️
bit if you do get cornered, you might want to remind him that… 🧵
1. about 90% of our coal power will shut down by 2035, the rest well before 2040 — due to age and economics
2. nuclear won’t be able to contribute meaningfully to our grid before 2040 — SMRs won’t be commercially available for years, and large-scale nukes take that long to build
3. AEMO, the grid operator, is very confident we can keep the lights on and keep industry humming with wind, solar and hydro, supported by storage and backed up by a small amount of gas.
…we’ll burn less fossil gas in most years than we do now
🤓 90% of our coal power to retire by 2035 and *all* gone by 2038!
…according to the most likely projection in the much anticipated *draft* 2024 integrated system plan #ISP just released by @AEMO_Energy.
our grid is transitioning from fossil to renewable energy.🎉
read on! 🧵
this is the much anticipated *draft* of the 4th biennial edition of the ISP — first published in 2018 in response to the 2017 #FinkelReview of australia's NEM.
…the ISP was an evolution of the annual transmission planning reports #NTNDP produced for many years by AEMO.
highlights from ‘step change’ scenario:
• ~90% of coal fleet to retire before 2035
• remainder to shut by 2038
• tripling of grid-scale renewables by 2030, 7x by 2050
• quadrupling of firming capacity
• quadrupling of rooftop solar
i visited CATL, the world's largest battery manufacturer, in china early this week and saw the production process from lithium compounds through to tested cells.
i asked our host if the company would consider opening a factory in australia and he gave me a sobering answer…
australia mines about half the world's lithium and battery manufacture is _highly_ automated, requiring relatively little labor per unit of production.
…and we're installing a *lot* of grid storage.
so i thought it might make sense to locate some cell production here 🇦🇺…
my host explained that just a few years ago a large battery factory could make 1 GWh of batteries/year…
…but factories under construction will produce 20 GWh/year.
new economies of scale are behind the big falls in battery cost.
🧵 9 march 2017 was a remarkable day in australia's energy transition.
it could be said that our understanding of batteries' role in the grid fundamentally changed between morning and evening.
a short thread…
at 9:56am @AEMO_Energy published a report stating:
"being modular & scalable, electrochemical batteries such as Lithium-ion (Li-ion) are capable of helping maintain power quality at small-scale power (approximately 1–100 kW) & medium-term storage…"