The Climate Changers: The Grid Goes Green

South Australia is building what it hopes will be the world’s first electrical grid that relies completely on renewable energy

offline
South Australia is building what it hopes will be the world’s first electrical grid that relies completely on renewable energy

A decade ago, the main landmark in Port Augusta, South Australia, was a 200-meter-tall chimney puffing fumes from a coal-fired power station. “You could see it from 40-odd kilometers out,” says Gary Rowbottom, who worked at the plant for 17 years.

Today, the chimney is gone. The town’s chief landmark now is a tall tower topped by a dazzling light, where sunlight reflected from 23,000 mirrors on the ground is focused to power four giant greenhouses. Next door is a renewable energy park, home to 50 wind turbines and 2,50,000 solar panels.

Port Augusta is representative of a remarkable shift that has swept South Australia. In 2007, just one per cent of the state’s electricity came from solar and wind. Now it is more than 70 per cent—one of the highest proportons of any major grid in the world—and the state is ramping up to use only renewable power year-round.

This clean energy rush is highly instructive to the wider world, which needs to rapidly wean itself off fossil fuels to avert a climate disaster. To find out how such progress is possible, I met those leading the charge. The state’s renewable energy push began in 2002. At the time, South Australia’s electricity was very expensive, partly because its large spread-out grid is paid for by a relatively small population of just 1.8 million, and partly because the previous government had privatized the state’s electricity assets “on terms that wouldn’t benefit consumers,” says Tom Koutsantonis, the state’s current energy minister. 

The next year, the state’s first wind farm, on the Fleurieu peninsula, was commissioned. This opened the floodgates to more renewable energy projects, with 24 onshore wind farms and five large-scale solar farms now operating. In 2008, the state government began incentivizing households to put solar panels on their roofs by offering generous payments for any excess solar ...

Read more!