Like Trump, Turnbull’s energy policy is based on “alternative facts” | Renew Economy

The first few weeks of the Trump administration have been extraordinary, and quite frightening – not just because of the incompetence of a president who appears to be little more than a self-obsessed idiot, but by the actions of the dangerous ideologues at the helm of the world’s biggest economy and military power.

There have been shocks across the policy spectrum, but probably none more so than in climate and clean energy, where Trump has promised to throw the baby out with the bathwater, quit the Paris deal, disband or dismember environmental regulations, “re-invent” coal, stop renewables and build more gas pipelines.

It might sound stone-cold crazy to many people in Australia, but it should be familiar: There is little that Trump and his regime is doing on climate and clean energy that has not already achieved, or attempted, by the current Coalition government in Canberra. 

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We can't have another destructive decade in energy policy | AFR

by Matthew Warren

Energy is a business. We urgently need to start treating it like one again. For the past decade this critical multibillion-dollar sector has been held hostage in an escalating ideological and political struggle over climate change.

Last week the Prime Minister used his address at the National Press Club to position energy policy as a battleground federal issue. While many of the points he made were sensible, his speech was the latest in an escalating cold war on energy and climate between the two major parties.

We now risk rolling into a second decade of energy policy uncertainty. This could be catastrophic for the cost and reliability of energy in Australia.

We are already experiencing the consequences of energy policy paralysis for the past decade. It's not pretty. The "grid" as we know it is degrading in front of our eyes. Power stations are closing and not being replaced. Like the fleet of cars in Cuba, remaining owners are sweating remaining generators until and if the investment drought breaks.

Australian businesses and households are now feeling the results of this dysfunction via higher prices and increased unreliability. Right now, there is no respite in sight.

Of course the real pivot issue isn't energy, it's climate change. In the vacuum of credible policy to reduce emissions the debate is framed by the extremes of the ideological spectrum. We are asked to choose between impossible solutions: building more coal-fired generation (we can't finance) versus running the grid entirely on renewables (we can't, at least not yet).

Business risk

Climate change is not a belief. It's a risk. In the middle of the last decade the global business community finally made sense of the growing concerns of scientists about the risk that greenhouse gas emissions from human activities were accelerating the natural climate variation of the planet, with potentially catastrophic consequences.

Unsurprisingly it was the insurance and re-insurance industry that began to calculate the potential liabilities and sounded the alarm. This flowed on to banking and finance. Climate change risks and the consequential constraints on emissions have been increasingly factored in to commercial transactions ever since.

Commercial consideration of these risks now occurs regardless of current climate policy settings. In effect, it means it is not up to state and federal politicians, or US presidents for that matter, to decide if climate change is real or not. That's not the question any more. It's how we manage the risk, which is real.

Australia's energy sector has been operating for the past decade with an implicit price on emissions. All Australia's energy businesses have effectively shelved any plans they once had to build new coal-fired generation. Holding aside all other considerations, they are 50-year assets with a material carbon risk. This is only marginally improved by new coal technologies, or in the case of carbon capture and storage, are still too expensive. Put simply, you cannot finance coal.

Over the past decade the industry's investment focus has shifted from coal and gas to gas and renewables. Some new gas generation proceeded, but has since stalled. While gas has a much lower carbon risk, further investment is unprofitable without some kind of effective constraint on emissions.

Carbon price

We've also seen some investment in renewables, facilitated by the renewable energy target (RET). But now we are seeing signs this too is struggling. The decision by one retailer to opt for paying the penalty price cap rather than source and surrender renewable energy certificates is a symptom of a deeper investment problem.

When it was increased in 2009, the RET was designed to operate alongside and converge with a national carbon price. The idea was the RET would support early investment in renewables projects, develop capacity and skill in integration until, by around 2020 the carbon price would be high enough to take over the role as sole investment signal for the entire sector.

Instead, for the past year the renewable certificate price has been hovering right against its ceiling price, and this in a time of higher wholesale electricity prices. Conditions have never been theoretically better to build renewables, but even with these support measures renewables are now caught by the investment paralysis.

At the end of March Hazelwood power station closes in Victoria's Latrobe Valley, following Northern in Port Augusta last year. That's more than 2000MW of firm generation exiting the market without any plan as to how we can give investors the confidence to replace it.

Political standoff

South Australia's reliability issues are now well documented. Victoria is about to go into negative capacity reserves, meaning it does not have enough generation to meet periods of maximum demand. It is still going to be expected to supply South Australia with power during these times (normally heatwaves), which means it will in turn need to rely on power from New South Wales and Tasmania.

In other words, everything has to go right to avoid blackouts, while power prices increase as we sustain demand but short supply. It's an increasingly fragile system.

These problems and the impacts on industry and households will only worsen if we do nothing and sustain another decade of political standoff. It's a destructive impasse that needs to end before we do more serious economic self-harm.

Credible national energy and climate policy remains the solution we need urgently. This means a nationally co-ordinated energy strategy and a clear and durable measure to constrain emissions. This can take many forms, but is unlikely to include arbitrary, populist targets or schemes for specific technologies. The difference between political window dressing and meaningful reform can be measured by the scale of the return of investors to the energy market. We need them back, at scale, and soon.



Read more: http://www.afr.com/opinion/columnists/we-cant-have-another-destructive-decade-in-energy-policy-20170207-gu7561#ixzz4Y4MNyhj9
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TCFD Recommendations Report Overview Webinar 24 January 2017

This one hour webinar provides an overview of the main points of the Recommendations report and the implementation guidance. 

The 60-day public consultation period on the Recommendations of the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures report is currently open through to February 12, 2017. The consultation is a critical way to solicit views on the Task Force's recommendations. Results from the public consultation will be shared with the Financial Stability Board in February 2017 followed by an updated report to the Financial Stability Board in June 2017. 

You can submit feedback directly via the online questionnaire to facilitate analysis of the comments.  

Submission to NEM Security Review | Alan Pears AM

In December 2016 Dr Alan Finkel presented his preliminary report on the Independent Review into the Future of the Security of the National Electricity Market. 

Click here to read the submission made by Alan Pears in response to the report.  Alan is a Senior Industry Fellow at RMIT University and a member of the Climate Alliance board of advisors. Alan’s submission focuses on the role of energy efficiency. 

Dr Alan Finkel's preliminary report can be found here.

Global Risks Report 2017 | World Economic Forum

For over a decade, The Global Risks Report has focused attention on the evolution of global risks and the deep interconnections between them. The Report has also highlighted the potential of persistent, long-term trends such as inequality and deepening social and political polarisation to exacerbate risks associated with, for example, the weakness of the economic recovery and the speed of technological change.

These trends came into sharp focus during 2016, with rising political discontent and disaffection evident in countries across the world. The highest-profile signs of disruption may have come in Western countries – with the United Kingdom’s vote to leave the European Union and President-elect Donald Trump’s victory in the US presidential election – but across the globe there is evidence of a growing backlash against elements of the domestic and international status quo.

Read more 

Major Initiative to Embed Climate Concerns in Investment Decisions | Church of England

Thirteen leading international asset owners and five asset managers with over £2 trillion under management launched the Transition Pathway Initiative (TPI) today to better understand how the transition to a low-carbon economy affects their investments. The TPI will assess how individual companies are positioning themselves for the transition to a low-carbon economy through a public, transparent online tool. The heads of funds involved launched the Initiative this morning (11th January) at the opening of the stock market at the London Stock Exchange. 

Click here for the press release.