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Creating clarity during the energy transition

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      What history can teach us about the clean energy transition

      The energy transition is described as not just a once-in-a-generational change; but a huge structural reform which is reshaping our entire energy system and economy. While it is, there have been seismic shifts in our industry many times in the past. The history of the Australian electricity industry, particularly in Queensland and Victorian has some lessons for us in understanding where the industry is today, and the transition we will need to make.


      The late 1980s were arguably the golden era for centralised electricity generation. The late 1970s and 1980s saw the state electricity commissions at the height of their power with newly constructed fleet of large centralised coal-fired generation plant providing power via the recently completed (intra-state) transmission backbones. All aspects of the existing electricity industry (generation, transmission and distribution, retailing) were mature and electricity was inarguably an essential component of a modern society.

      Beginnings of the end of coal

      By the 2000’s, state electricity commissions had been privatised and the NEM formed. It was also clear to astute observers that the coal-fired era was over. That mightn’t have been dogma within the industry, but momentum for the transition was clearly building.

      Fast forward a couple of decades, and discussion around the transition has well and truly broken into the mainstream; large scale renewables are very much the norm and rooftop solar covers more than a third of all residential roofs in the country. Even the most stalwart coal proponents have (begrudgingly) accepted that no new coal-fired stations will be built in this country and we’re in the process of somewhat messily phasing out the existing plants.

      By the 2000’s, state electricity commissions had been privatised and the NEM formed. It was also clear to astute observers that the coal-fired era was over. That mightn’t have been dogma within the industry, but momentum for the transition was clearly building.  Fast forward a couple of decades, and discussion around the transition has well and truly broken into the mainstream; large scale renewables are very much the norm and rooftop solar covers more than a third of all residential roofs in the country. Even the most stalwart coal proponents have (begrudgingly) accepted that no new coal-fired stations will be built in this country and we’re in the process of somewhat messily phasing out the existing plants.

      Tarong Power Station during construction, early 1980s.

      Pace of change

      If that pace of change feels rapid, consider the changes during previous generations. Rural electrification schemes were still being actively pursued during the 1960s and into the 1970s — many regional towns, especially in large states like Queensland, were not connected to the central transmission system and it was not uncommon for rural properties to be entirely without electricity.

      Centralised generating plants, were still an evolving concept in some states. Although Victoria centralised the generation system around coal in the Latrobe Valley early in the twentieth century (in fact, one of the first decisions of the newly minted SECV was to put the kibosh on the Kiewa hydro-electric scheme in favour of the original Yallourn A station and expansion of the coalfields); in states like Queensland there were still arguments about the new centralised design of the Gladstone Power Station versus the array of existing smaller stations in the south east (like Swanbank, Bulimba, Tennyson, Howard, Roma and Townsville).

      Selling the public on the benefits of electricity

      During this same period the state electricity commissions still actively marketed the benefits of electricity for households by operating showrooms displaying and selling electrical appliances and white goods! Several of the state electricity commissions even published cookbooks advising housewives the benefits of cooking with electricity and the differences from cooking on fire.

      Going back even further, most of the state electricity commissions didn’t exist, transmission systems were piecemeal at best and generation was not centralised. In Brisbane the privately owned City Electric Light Co. built Bulimba A on the south side of the river and the Brisbane City Council built the New Farm Powerhouse on the north side. The generation capacity from either one of these stations was sufficient to supply the entire southeast’s needs at this time, but the inefficiencies of unfettered competition led to this situation.

      Electricity supply wasn’t actually established until the last decade of the 19th century — Tamworth became the first Australian town with electric street lighting in 1888. (Demonstrations had been completed in Sydney previously, but nothing permanent.)

      Hauling cables across Victoria Bridge (Brisbane), 1925

      Hauling cables across Victoria Bridge (Brisbane), 1925

      Within four generations we’ve gone from a nascent electricity supply industry to an incredibly complex and interconnected system connecting most of the east coast to large centralised generation systems. Electricity has gone from being a novelty or curiosity, to something which underpins practically all aspects of modern civilisation.

      So… which part of the history of electricity supply would suggest that it’s a static industry not subject to massive change each generation? Why is the energy transition such an (apparently) gut wrenching proposal to so many, and not just another chapter in the efforts to continuously improve society?

      Amongst this continual change there are some core themes which remain the same.

      1.    Power has always been too expensive
      Complaining about power prices is a common thread throughout the history of the electricity supply industry. There are very few points in history where people haven’t complained about the price of electricity or where driving down electricity costs hasn’t been front of mind for the authorities in charge.

      This is just as true for residential households and businesses as it is for large industry — the construction of the aluminium smelters in the 1970s and 80s was contingent on the price of electricity and involved plenty of horse-trading between the aluminium businesses and state governments. Modern data centre development is agitating just as strongly for low power costs in order to continue flooding social media with AI slop.

      Swanbank A control room.Swanbank A control room

      2.    Big infrastructure projects have always been contentious
      Large coal-fired power stations, hydro-electric schemes and transmission lines were built despite community opposition. Social licence and environmental concerns are not purely 21st century concepts. 

      Large infrastructure projects, by their very nature, are contentious and attract opposition from both affected communities, interested parties and opportunists. In more modern times we associate the opposition largely with affected communities (and the long comet tail of professional protesters), but opposition to previous projects has also been as much about capturing favourable outcomes.

      To wit — Queensland’s development of the large centralised coal-fired power plants in the late 1970s, which ultimately yielded Tarong, Stanwell and Callide B, saw both political interference from the Premier Joh Bjelke-Petersen, and vocal opposition from the Swanbank collieries who could see their demise in favour of other coal mines closer to the new station sites.

      Swanbank A & B stations, 1968Swanbank A & B stations, 1968

      3.    Reliability problems, or perceived reliability problems
      Culture war columnists dedicate many, many inches to the problems of reliability — our system is apparently teetering on the brink and a gust of wind (or rather, the lack of a gust) could send it tumbling into the abyss.

      Apart from the fact that we haven’t breached the official standard of system reliability in 15 years, or that most of these commentators don’t actually understand what reliability means in the context of a power system; the entire premise of degrading reliability somewhat rests on the premise that we’re “ruining” a previous very reliable system.

      The electricity supply industry was deeply challenged during the second world war, for obvious reasons, and then worsened immediately after the war as supply chains still hadn’t recovered (and no longer benefitted from war time spending). The late 1940s and early 1950s in Queensland were periods of austerity, where the community was routinely asked to use less electricity and endure frequent blackouts. (Society’s reliance on electricity during this period was admittedly much lower than today, but the historical record seems to suggest a much hardier attitude from the public when asked to conserve electricity.)

      The 1970s and 1980s saw multiple industries affected by industrial disputes and strikes; the electricity industry was no different. 

      The increased interconnection of the NEM and modern communications technologies and control systems broadly lead to very high levels of reliability in the 21st century; and while it’s true that forecasts of reliability concerns have increased during this messy phase of the transition forecasts are just that. We are yet to endure rolling blackouts.

      The electricity supply industry is one of the most complex systems we’ve ever built as humans. And ensuring and maintaining reliability has been an enduring problem since the very first generators sputtered to life; it is far from a new challenge for the system operator.
      Inside the guts of Collinsville unit 1 (30 MW), circa 1968

      Inside the guts of Collinsville unit 1 (30 MW), circa 1968

      There are many other common threads throughout the energy industry which would give credence to the old aphorism about being doomed to repeat history and all that. It should be shocking to absolutely no one that there a great number of lessons in the pages of history books, many of which are surprisingly recent.

      And yet in reading about the history of the electricity supply industry it has also struck me just how rapid the pace of change has been, and how recent many of the features of the modern grid really are.

      What will the grid look like in another three decades?


      All photos in this article from the wonderful two part volume A History of the Electricity Supply Industry in Queensland (1986, 1988). This is an edited version of a longer story first published in Currently Speaking. You can find the full text here.

      Alex Leemon, Flexibility Markets Lead, Gridcog

      Energy Monthly

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