Date: 10/07/2020 17:38:59
From: dv
ID: 1587491
Subject: 8 GW renewable energy zone for NSW

NSW government says renewable energy zone in New England could power 3.5m homes

Environment minister Matt Kean says the push to build 8,000 megawatts of wind and solar is part of a plan to replace coal-fired power

The New South Wales government aims to back renewable energy plants in the New England region with the capacity to power 3.5m homes, with the state’s environment minister saying enough will be built to replace most of the state’s coal-fired power stations earlier than scheduled.

Matt Kean, the minister for energy and the environment, will on Friday announce a second renewable energy zone for the state, following a previously planned designated area in the state’s central west.

He said the latest announcement – that the government would look to attract investors to build 8,000 megawatts of wind and solar in the New England region in the state’s north – was effectively “a huge, modern-day power station”.

https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2020/jul/10/nsw-government-says-renewable-energy-zone-in-new-england-could-power-35m-homes?CMP=soc_567

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Date: 11/07/2020 10:35:19
From: The Rev Dodgson
ID: 1587897
Subject: re: 8 GW renewable energy zone for NSW

dv said:


NSW government says renewable energy zone in New England could power 3.5m homes

Environment minister Matt Kean says the push to build 8,000 megawatts of wind and solar is part of a plan to replace coal-fired power

The New South Wales government aims to back renewable energy plants in the New England region with the capacity to power 3.5m homes, with the state’s environment minister saying enough will be built to replace most of the state’s coal-fired power stations earlier than scheduled.

Matt Kean, the minister for energy and the environment, will on Friday announce a second renewable energy zone for the state, following a previously planned designated area in the state’s central west.

He said the latest announcement – that the government would look to attract investors to build 8,000 megawatts of wind and solar in the New England region in the state’s north – was effectively “a huge, modern-day power station”.

https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2020/jul/10/nsw-government-says-renewable-energy-zone-in-new-england-could-power-35m-homes?CMP=soc_567

Looks good.

Is there a national level plan for all this stuff though?

Will the Snowy upgrade provide sufficient storage capacity, or is there a need for big investment in other storage facilities?
What are the plans for converting road traffic to electric power?
And what of making all new building construction more energy efficient?
What are the plans for power continuity during long periods with low wind and/or low solar output?

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