The power system servicing WA’s south-west is in good shape for the next three years but massive investment in extra generation and storage capacity is needed to replace Collie’s coal-fired power stations, according to a report the Australian Energy Market Operator released on Tuesday.
AEMO WA manager Kate Ryan said the significantly improved outlook for the next three years was due to investment on a scale not seen in decades on the South West Interconnected System.
Ryan said 1000 megawatts of extra capacity secured by tenders to AEMO and a 500 megawatt battery being built by state-owned generator Synergy in Collie had turned around what had been predicted to be a difficult 12-months starting in mid-2026.
In its annual Electricity Statement of Opportunities for WA AEMO said the timely delivery of the projects despite labour constraints and global supply chain issues was critical.
AEMO is predicting a small shortfall this summer but expect it to be addressed by a tender for additional capacity and the state government’s decision to keep a turbine at Synergy’s Muja power station in reserve for six months after it was planned to be retired.
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More seriously, in 2027-28 AEMO is predicting a shortfall of generation capacity of almost 400 megawatts, increasing more than sevenfold over the following six years to 2880 megawatts in 2033-34.
“This highlights that critical investment in power generation, storage, demand-side response and transmission will be needed to meet demand and replace retiring coal-fired power stations by 2030 and beyond,” Ryan said.
Part of the solution is a reserve capacity mechanism where AEMO sets out two years ahead of time the additional capacity it is willing to purchase to maintain power reliability. A federal government capacity investment scheme is also expected to help.
Source Agencies