WhatFinger

An accidental experiment in how far you can push technologies such as wind and solar power in to an electricity grid before something breaks

A new international example for bad energy policy


If a country's goal is to decrease carbon emissions by increasing reliance on renewable energy, it only makes sense to install the new equipment in the location with the best potential--both in geography and government. For Australia, which has a national Renewable Energy Target (RET) of 33,000 gigawatt hours of electricity generated by defined renewable sources by 2020, South Australia (SA) is that place. According to SA Treasurer Tom Koutsantonis, who is also the Energy Minister, the federal government had determined that SA is where "the best conditions for wind farms" could be found. The state government was amenable, with SA Premier Jay Wetherill promising to make Adelaide, its capitol city, "the first 'carbon neutral' city by 2050." The state's RET is for 50 percent renewable energy by 2025. Wetherall, in 2014, claimed: "This new target of half of the state's power to be generated by renewable sources will create jobs and drive capital investment and advanced manufacturing industries."
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