Wednesday, 3 May 2023

4th May 2023 Buru Energy investigates potential for floating liquefied natural gas facility in the Kimberley

 https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-05-04/buru-investigate-floating-liquefied-natural-gas-kimberley/102292354

Ten years after a conflict between traditional owner groups and an international mining company in the Kimberley, an oil and gas giant is looking into establishing a floating liquefied natural gas facility in the region.

Buru Energy found sizeable oil and gas deposits in the Canning Basin in 2019, around 80 kilometres south-east of Broome, later acquiring 100 per cent ownership of the discovery dubbed "Rafael".

A pre-feasibility study has since found a floating liquefied natural gas facility anchored off the Kimberley coast could be a timely and cost-effective way to process and export the resource from the Canning Basin.

Martin Pritchard, director of strategy at conservation group Environs Kimberley, said the plan could re-ignite protests in the region following the recent ten-year anniversary of the Woodside stoush.

"People in the past have felt strong enough to protest against this kind of development," he said.

"More people would be getting involved and standing up to protest against this kind of industrialisation."

Western Australia makes up 63 per cent of the national mineral exploration expenditure and in 2022 LNG production was valued at a record-breaking $51 billion, almost $24 billion more than the previous year.

Mr Pritchard said he was concerned the tourism industry would take a hit if the development went ahead. 

"What we're talking about here is a project that could mean industrialising the Kimberley coast," he said.

"It's a really special place, it's globally renowned and what we should be doing is looking after it.

"We don't think that this is the kind of development that fits in with the world-class landscapes of the Kimberley and the million-dollar tourism industry."



Thursday, 27 April 2023

April 28th 2023 - Drop in wholesale power prices as renewable energy generation from wind and solar grows

 https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-04-28/wholesale-power-prices-drop-amid-renewable-energy-growth/102273350

Key points:

  • The amount of electricity produced by rooftop solar panels jumped 23 per cent on average compared with the same period in 2022
  • Generation from large-scale wind and solar farms also surged, up 11 per cent, as new projects came online
  • Gas-fired generation dipped to its lowest level in almost 20 years

Surging renewable energy output has pushed fossil fuel-fired generation down to record low levels in Australia's biggest electricity grid, triggering another big fall in wholesale prices.

The Australian Energy Market Operator (AEMO), which runs the national electricity market covering the eastern states, said power prices had tumbled in the three months to the end of March.

Average prices were $83 a megawatt hour for the period, a 10.5 per cent decrease compared with the previous three months, and a whopping 62 per cent lower than the September quarter last year.

The findings were outlined in AEMO's latest quarterly report, which also showed the extraordinary growth of output from green energy sources such as wind and solar.

AEMO said the amount of electricity produced by Australia's vast array of rooftop solar panels jumped by 23 per cent on average compared with the same period in 2022.

Generation from large-scale wind and solar farms also surged, up 11 per cent, as new projects came online.

At the same time as renewable energy soared, the agency said coal- and gas-fired power fell away to historically low levels, despite AEMO reporting that price caps imposed by the federal government had lowered their costs.

According to AEMO, gas-fired generation dipped to its lowest level in almost 20 years, while the steady decline of both black and brown coal power showed few signs of slowing.

There are more than 3 million Australian homes with solar panels, which typically pump any excess power they produce back into the grid in an uncontrolled way, pushing out other generators such as coal-fired plants.

Hunter Valley's Liddell Power Station closes in end of an era for Australia's oldest coal-fired plant. (April 2023)

The coal-fired generator leaves behind a 52-year legacy of creating electricity for the country and creating employment for thousands of people in the NSW Hunter Valley.

The final turbine will go offline today but experts have said the closure will have little impact on the grid.

Monday, 21 November 2022

November 2022 - Chefs, doctors and real estate developers calling to rid kitchens of gas cooking

 https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-11-22/doctors-climate-scientists-chefs-push-for-end-to-gas-in-kitchens/101678140

For decades, "natural gas" has sold itself to families as the fastest, most-efficient way to cook. But now there's a battle for your kitchen stove, and a push to get you to embrace electric for your health and for the planet.

A coalition of chefs, doctors, climate scientists and real estate developers have joined forces to push back against the gas industry's marketing, with the aim of removing gas from kitchens worldwide.

Campaigners say in addition to heating the climate, gas stoves contribute to asthma and other health conditions.

And that coalition thinks that if they can rid kitchens of gas, they'll rid homes of the fossil fuel altogether.

The Global Cooksafe Coalition is being launched in Sydney today and announcing partnerships with developers Lendlease and GPT, who have agreed to stop putting any gas in new buildings by 2030 and to retrofit existing buildings by 2040.

"Our view is that the future is all electric, whether it's electric vehicles, whether it's cooking, whether it's space heating," said Davina Rooney, chief executive of the Green Building Council, and one of the founders of the Global Cooksafe Coalition.

According to a 2018 paper published in the Medical Journal of Australia, 12 per cent of the burden of childhood asthma in Australia is due to indoor gas stoves.

And a 2013 paper combining the results of 41 other studies found children living in a home with a gas stove had a 42 per cent increased risk of having recent asthma symptoms.

There is also evidence that the pollutants released by gas stoves can affect the brain and heart, and increase susceptibility to allergens, said Kate Charlesworth, a public health physician and member of the Climate Council.



Wednesday, 28 September 2022

Sept 2022: More batteries installed in Broome


 Two batteries are installed at the corner of Port Drive and Cable Beach Road. After testing they could come online as early as late December 2022. Households in Broome will be able to send excess solar panel energy to the battery storage which is then generated back at night bringing power prices down for consumers. Two more batteries will be installed at Broome North. The batteries will be also used to stabilize the Horizon Power grid.

“GRID FORMING BATTERY” Energy Storage System (BESS) used in a grid connected application.  Specifications of each battery are:

Power 400 KVA

Current 556 A

Energy 279 KWh 240/415 V

Mass 8.600 kg

Dimensions (LxWxH) 3.3 mx 2.2 m x 2.4 m

Manufactured by Rolls-Royce Solutions Berlin GmbH - Made in Germany.

Aug 5th 2021 - The largest ever battery in the Kimberley was installed at the Broome Boulevard. Broome Boulevard Solar Car Park 1363 kW DC Power and 1000 kW Battery







 

Sunday, 17 July 2022

18th July 2022 - Theia Energy pull plans for one of the Kimberley's largest proposed onshore oil and gas projects.


 The future of one of the Kimberley's largest proposed onshore oil and gas projects remains unclear, after its backers pulled their plans from the state's environmental watchdog last week.

Theia Energy asked the Environmental Protection Authority to assess its proposal to drill and frack two exploratory wells 155km south east of Broome in February, with the proposal attracting 2000 public submissions.
But the company requested to terminate its assessment application last week.
Theia's proposal has sparked significant speculation since it first surface publicly, with a 2018 investor presentation suggesting up to 57 billion barrels of oil could be recovered via hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking", with the company also negotiating with the area's Karajarri traditional owners.
But environmental groups had vowed to oppose the project, saying the risks posed to groundwater and the environment, as well as increasing carbon emissions from oil and gas extraction, were unacceptable.

Monday, 25 April 2022

26th April 2022 - Oil giant Shell feels heat over giant $21 billion Prelude floating LNG plant

 

When Dutch-Anglo oil giant Shell decided to build a massive floating gas factory known as Prelude in 2011, it was billed as the dawn of a new era for the industry. 


Key points:

  • The Prelude project has been beset by cost and time blowouts, as well as technical problems
  • A lobbyist and former engineer says safety issues are the biggest concern
  • There are claims Prelude may never pay royalties for the gas it processes off Australia's north-west coast

Australia was midway through a once-in-a-lifetime $300 billion splurge that would make the country the world's biggest producer of super-chilled, shipped gas.

Floating gas plants were supposed to be the logical evolution, vacuuming up gas wherever they went and making fortunes for shareholders and taxpayers.

But barely a decade later, Prelude has been racked by cost and time blowouts, technical problems, and warnings from the regulator that the project came dangerously close to a catastrophic failure.

What's more, critics say the facility may never pay a cent in royalties, is unlikely to deliver a molecule of gas to the domestic market, and has sent most of the construction jobs offshore.

It is all a far cry from the rhetoric of last decade, when Shell's then-Australian chairwoman Ann Pickard said Prelude would be "full of Australians" and "generate a tonne of tax revenues".

How did the reality diverge so widely from the rhetoric, and what does the future hold for Shell's grand plans?



Wednesday, 16 February 2022

Feb 17th 2022 Origin Energy to shut Australia's largest coal-fired power plant, Eraring Power Station, by 2025

 

Origin Energy to shut Australia's largest coal-fired power plant, Eraring Power Station, by 2025

Origin Energy is seeking approval to shut Australia's largest coal-fired power plant seven years early, with the Eraring facility in the NSW Hunter region now set to close by August 2025.



FRACKING FACTS

2020 Fracking Facts