Australian Senate delays renewable energy laws

The Australian parliament's upper house Senate on Thursday postponed a debate on renewable energy laws until August at the earliest, delaying the government’s plans passing the laws by the end of June.

The laws would have set a 20% target for renewable energy use by 2020 as compared to Australia’s current 6.5% levels. This breaks down to a statutory target capacity of 9,500GWh from renewable electricity sources in 2010, and increasing it to 45,000GWh in 2020. Currently, most of energy comes from coal, oil and gas, and this practice has earned Australia the infamy as one the world’s worst per capita polluters.

Independent Senator Steve Fielding, with the support of Nick Xenophon and the conservative opposition parties, moved that the laws be sent to a Senate inquiry to report back by August 12, to examine the impact on big business.

Needless to say, the government and Greens party opposed the delay, stating the move would undermine investment in Australia's renewable energy sector and would lead to job losses while passing the laws could open up to $22 billion in investments for solar power. This trend against emissions reduction is likely to continue while the government faces a Senate roadblock with its other plans to introduce an emissions trading scheme by July 2011.

"The people who are pushing for this delay are the big emitters. I want to see this legislation through, I want to give certainty to the renewable energy industry that they have got their target," Greens Senator Christine Milne told parliament.

This move is a definte shift from the March 2009 feed-in tariffs for Canberra.

Newsletter

Preview Latest Subscribe
We won't share your details - promise!

Publications

  • Photovoltaics International 14th Edition

    Photovoltaics International 14th Edition

    Published in November 2011, the 14th edition of Photovoltaics International provides a variety of technical papers from some of the industry’s stalwarts. Features include: TÜV Rheinland on junction box testing; Laser Zentrum Hannover on laser edge isolation of mc-Si cells; Calisolar on the importance of traceability; Fraunhofer ISE on EWT cells; and EPIA on Europe’s LCOE.

  • Photovoltaics International Lite, Volume 05 - 2011

    Photovoltaics International Lite, Volume 05 - 2011

    This digital interactive Lite sees Tom Cheyney follow Agua Caliente’s progress on becoming one of first truly utility-scale PV power farms, where 40–50MW (AC) will be commissioned by the end of the year. We also feature one of the world’s largest silicon thin-film PV power plants, Avenal; a report on warnings of the collapse of module prices from Solarbuzz and PI-Berlin presents tips on PV module testing. A print version of this edition will be distributed at Solar Power International 2011 in Dallas, Texas.

  • Manufacturing The Solar Future: The 2011 Production Annual

    Manufacturing The Solar Future: The 2011 Production Annual

    Manufacturing the Solar Future is the primary source guide for detailed information on the PV production process. This annual provides technical details on how the leading companies and research organizations worldwide are addressing this need by dramatically improving their manufacturing processes.

Partners

Acknowledgements

Solar Media