Subscribe to Newsletter
  • ACQUIRE

logo

  • Energy
  • Construction
  • Resources
  • Trending
  • Business Insight
  • Events
  • Magazine
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Home
  • Home
  • Energy
  • Construction
  • Resources
  • Trending
  • Business Insight
  • Events
  • Magazine
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Renewables making electricity cleaner and cheaper: AEMO

25 Jan, 2023
Aboriginal



The Australian Energy Market Operator’s (AEMO) latest data shows that renewable energy is our electricity market’s Most Valuable Player, driving down costs and emissions while reducing our reliance on polluting, expensive coal and gas.

“In the thick of a cost of living and climate crisis, record high wind and solar generation have heroically delivered cheaper wholesale electricity and the National Electricity Market’s lowest emissions for the last quarter of 2022,” Dr Jennifer Rayner, Climate Council’s Head of Advocacy, said.

“Clean, affordable renewables are also helping reduce our reliance on coal and gas, which are not only eye-wateringly expensive, but fuel dangerous climate change.

“We can and should power Australia with 100% renewable energy, backed by storage. State and Federal governments are making positive steps to increase investment in renewables and storage, but we must keep ramping up the effort so we can reach 100% renewables by 2030,” said Dr Rayner.

AEMO’s Quarterly Energy Dynamics report for October – December 2022 showed:

Average renewable output was the highest on record, peak renewable contribution records continue to be broken, and the overall contribution of both coal and gas fell
The increased share of wind and grid-scale solar in setting prices reduced wholesale prices, while the share of coal generation reduced.
Wind and grid-scale solar produced a fifth of total generation in the NEM in Q4 2022
The NEM’s emissions for the fourth quarter of the year dropped to record lows, thanks to record high renewables and record low coal.

Dr Rayner said: “Two of Australia’s most urgent energy priorities are to drive down electricity prices and reduce emissions this decade to avoid the worst impacts of dangerous climate change.

“A fully renewables-powered grid will help tackle the cost of living and climate crises together in the best two-for-one deal Australians will ever see.”

Share this story

  • Share on LinkedIn
  • Share on Twitter
  • Share on Facebook

Related Articles

Connecting Green Hydrogen MENA 2024

Australian PV Institute

Comments

Leave a comment Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Breaking

  • Energy
  • Construction
  • Resources
12 Jan

First stage of Eraring battery starts commercial operations

09 Jan

Japan’s first floating offshore wind farm starts operations

09 Jan

Vestas powers South Australia’s clean future

09 Jan

Strategic funding builds future-ready Queensland

09 Jan

UNSW researchers find solar panels fail faster than expected

19 Dec

RICS report shows AI could boost green infrastructure

17 Dec

CEFC urges investors to lead green data centres growth

12 Dec

Queensland offers renters, landlords rebates for solar power use

12 Dec

NSW government grants $25.45M to reduce cement emissions

12 Dec

Australia awards first embodied carbon rating to Frasers Property

19 Dec

Airbridge secures AU$1.5 million grant for carbon dioxide capture project

19 Dec

Study finds Australian organisations place technology central to climate action

15 Dec

Flinders University researchers search solutions for mine waste

12 Dec

Monash University launches national research hub to convert carbon wastes

08 Dec

Woodside investor meeting highlights Murujuga protections

Online Magazine

    Current Cover
  • Login
  • Subscribe

Subscribe

Subscribe to Newsletter

Our Titles

  • Share on Newsletter
  • Share on LinkedIn
  • Share on Twitter
  • Share on Facebook
  • Home
  • Contact Us
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy
© Sage Media Group 2026 All Rights Reserved.
×
Authorization
  • Registration
 This feature has been disabled
 This feature has been disabled until further notice, however you may still register
×
Registration
  • Autorization
Register
* All fields required