RenewEconomy
What would happen if every house in the country had rooftop solar PV, and every small car was an electric vehicle?
The Australian Energy Market Operator has started to wrestle with at least part of that question, but it’s a question that New Zealand’s biggest power generator, Meridian Energy, has also been asking itself as it prepares for what it describes as the inevitable “green revolution”.
New Zealand – thanks to its extensive geothermal, hydro and wind resources – is already largely renewable. But in a recent presentation to analysts it painted a scenario where there was a $NZ100 tonne carbon price, 3.3 million battery electric vehicles charging daily and two million rooftop solar PV units (pretty much saturation on EV and solar uptake).
The extensive hydro assets, and gas-fired peakers (little used in this scenario) provide the flexibility for the grid, and the NZ power system shows “remarkable resilience” to such changes.
“Our conclusion from then energy perspective is that it is not that big a deal,” Paul Chambers, the CFO of Meridian Energy, told RenewEconomy in an interview.
In fact, it would be a major benefit. The modelling shows no impact on average electricity prices, the electrification of the car fleet would cut fuel import costs, and it would reduce emissions because of the country’s largely emissions free generation fleet.
“A lot of countries have a problem with the idea of a green future. But we are already there,” Chambers said. “A lot of countries also have massive problems with the peakiness of the grid. All it takes is a little bit of smoothing of EV demand at night, and the grid can cope with enormous demand (for charging).”
Interestingly enough, the fact that New Zealand does have such a wealth of flexible generation means that household battery storage is probably not as valuable in that grid as it is in others. New Zealand also has relatively few houses with solar PV at the moment, and only around 550 EVs, although it has 50 charging stations.
Meridian says that battery storage is interesting for consumers because it can either enable customers to go off grid entirely, avoid peak pricing, or provide back-up in the case of black-outs. For networks, it helps manage the impact of solar PV and mitigates need for network upgrades.
Giles Parkinson is founder and editor of One Step Off The Grid, and also edits and founded Renew Economy and The Driven. He has been a journalist for 35 years and is a former business and deputy editor of the Australian Financial Review.
This post was published on June 17, 2015 2:46 pm
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Like the article, again slightly annoyed that there is no mention of storage, V2G demand response, and that there is no flexibility shown for Geothermal, which can also play a part in demand response and can curtail output.
Now that I have my rant out of the way, the article shows that at least NZ can get to 100% renewables before 2040.