Shots fired: Conservation Council says Queensland coal ‘unreliable’

Callide Power Station (offline)
CS Energy's Callide Power Station

Queensland Conservation Council has launched a scathing attack on the state’s coal-fired power assets, saying the age of Queensland coal reliability was ‘over’.

“First estimated to return within two weeks, it took two months for C3 to return to use after its neighbouring turbine exploded leaving nearly 500,000 people from the NSW border to north of Cairns without electricity. The delayed return of coal power unit C3 is yet another complication in what has been one of the most chaotic and dangerous periods in Queensland’s coal power history,” the council said in a statement.

Related article: Dr Sean Brady to lead independent investigation into Callide incident

Queensland Conservation Council director Dave Copeman said the explosion, tripping of other plants in the network and unplanned outages during the short period, demonstrated to the public that coal was an ageing and outdated technology. 

“The age of Queensland coal being thought of as ‘reliable’ is over. The likelihood of these kinds of events happening again will only increase, and if we do not bolster our energy system with renewable energy and storage, which is reliable, then Queenslanders will bear the brunt of future outages,” Mr Copeman said.

“As well as Callide C4 exploding, taking out all four units at Callide Power Station, Kogan Creek and a unit at Gladstone Power Station were also offline in unplanned outages on May 25. Together, these units represent nearly 30 per cent of Queensland’s coal fired power stations. 

“A system where 30 per cent of generators can simultaneously fail is not reliable or future-proof. Spending $200 million to rebuild something that is not only a danger to workers, but a danger to our climate, is throwing good money after bad and would be better spent investing in the jobs and reliable energy infrastructure of batteries and renewable power,” Mr Copeman said. 

“Kogan Creek was confirmed to be suffering a tube leak on May 25 in the Australian Energy Regulators (AER) recent report on high prices after the Callide explosion. On May 25 this reduced Kogan Creek’s availability by more than 500MW—around 75 per cent of its nameplate capacity. To fix it, Kogan Creek had to come completely offline from May 31 to June 16. Kogan Creek is the newest power station in the National Energy Market (NEM) but was the least reliable from 2017-2019,” the conservation council statement said.

Related article: Generating unit B2 back online at Callide

“A Gladstone Unit had been offline from May 7 after failing to return from planned maintenance. The Australian Conservation Foundation noted that visible air pollution from Gladstone Power Station has recently spiked. The Gladstone power station operators, NRG, blamed this on briefly delaying maintenance due to higher energy prices and demand. The failure of a unit to return after maintenance combined with visible pollution caused by “briefly” delaying maintenance calls into question the longevity of Queensland’s oldest coal fired power station.”

“Queensland coal fired power stations are already unprofitable. The Queensland Government itself admits there will be no dividends from its coal-fired generation after 2021-22. The Queensland Government owes its workers and consumers a secure, reliable system and clear plan about how to get there,” Mr Copemand said.

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