GAS 0.00% 13.0¢ state gas limited

Ann: Successful $5 Million Placement and SPP announced, page-13

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    Cant help but suspect that gas usage is going to be very very relevant again very quickly as the ongoing energy crisis keeps escalating across Australia.

    Simply put (IMHO) the blue sky promises of government on renewables are starting to quickly fall short in terms of delivery time/capital cost and reliability/required supply and by the day energy costs are going up not down driving an ongoing inflation and cost of living crisis (and this is happening around the world) - there is a great article in todays Australian - Tasmania - the supposed pinnacle of Green energy walking away from a massive green project - now in power shortage with industry being deeply impacted and now having to fall back on gas supply.

    Reality is quickly biting the dream of utopian green power and Tassie is a perfect case study. Governments will be embarrassed to turn back to coal - ideologically opposed to Nuclear as so I suspect will run to cheap and quick gas power which they will argue is a safe alternative to coal/nuclear.

    I think the future for STATE GAS is going to be pretty bright (Australian Article below)


    Industry, jobs on hold as Tasmania ‘runs out of power’ and Marinus Link stalls

    By MATTHEW DENHOLMTASMANIA CORRESPONDENT @MatthewRDenholm8:28AM AUGUST 10, 2023


    The Norske Skog paper mill has made a request to allow it to convert its boilers from coal to electricity could not be met by Hydro Tasmania, which has no spare power capacity, prompting claims of a ‘crisis’.

    Tasmania – which had promised to be the renewable energy “Battery of the Nation” – is instead facing its own energy supply crisis.

    The proposed Marinus Link, which was to spark an on-island renewables boom to power Victoria and beyond, was on Wednesday confirmed to have blown out beyond the state’s debt-financing capability. With the promised suite of new wind farms yet to materialise, major Tasmanian factories are being told there is no further power available for upgrades and expansions.

    A state that prides itself on 100 per cent renewable energy self-sufficiency was reportedly being forced to run an old gas-fired power plant. Tasmania’s Economic Regulator’s latest market watch report revealed no extra energy would be available before the third quarter of 2024, a situation described as overly optimistic by industry. The Boyer Norske Skog paper mill, northwest of Hobart, on Wednesday said Hydro Tasmania had declined to supply 50MW to run proposed new electric boilers, intended to replace the plant’s coal-fired boilers.

    Hydro has advised the company that they do not have any spare capacity, but they would be willing to firm supply – at a cost – if the mill could source the power from other generators, such as wind or solar power from either Tasmania or the mainland,” a Boyer spokesman said. “The company is continuing to examine these options, albeit they would involve substantially higher operating costs.”

    Tasmania’s Economic Regulator latest market watch report revealed no extra energy would be available before the third quarter of 2024. Sources in the manufacturing sector told The Australian the problem was not confined to Norske Skog and followed the effective transformation of Hydro from an energy supply utility into a power trading company.

    Tasmanian Chamber of Commerce and Industry chief executive Michael Bailey said the state was in “another energy crisis”.

    “We have businesses asking the government for more power to expand and create more jobs, yet today we’ve heard that the government is turning them away because we simply do not have enough generation to meet demand,” Mr Bailey said. “If that’s not the definition of a crisis, then what is? Even the Economic Regulator has said … there is no ‘head room’ in the Tasmanian grid, which confirms the business community’s worst fears.“If the government doesn’t commit to Marinus Link, the result will be a recession, increasing power prices and an increasingly unreliable grid.”Some in the business and energy sectors believe Marinus, thought to have blown out from $3.1bn to $5.5bn, is unviable and would simply export expanded renewable power – and jobs – to Victoria. They believe the government put “all its eggs in the Marinus basket”. With the project stalled, there was no “plan B” to expand on-island generation.

    While a large number of major wind farms are proposed for the state, most are linked to Marinus. A letter from the state to Anthony Albanese, released on Wednesday, said cost blowouts meant Marinus was “not able to be effectively managed within the fiscal capacity of the Tasmanian budget”.“We are concerned the project may not remain in the long-term interests of Tasmanian consumers or the state, and as such the Tasmanian government is not in a position to continue to take this project forward,” wrote Treasurer Michael Ferguson and Energy Minister Guy Barnett.

    State Labor said the energy shortage was forcing the government to run a gas-fired power plant in the state’s north.Premier Jeremy Rockliff conceded “a power supply challenge”, which he was attributing to strong economic growth.

    MATTHEW DENHOLM TASMANIA CORRESPONDENT
 
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