INTERNATIONAL SCAM OF THE YEAR?
Guest Post by Michael Darby Sunday 2 August 2020
Australia has granted major project status to AU$22bn solar, storage and transmission project which intends to sell unreliable energy to Singapore by undersea cable from Darwin. Here is the LINK to that story.
Ways to profit from a gigantic scam include milking subsidies & tax benefits and ramping shares. No government should bestow Major Project Status on a doomed “project” where no profit will ever be made from selling a product to a willing buyer. Australians call on the Prime Minister to guarantee that not one cent of public money will be committed to any fraudulent plan aimed at subsidies and lurks.
Any government which endorses a scam deserves to be brought down. Who will receive the greatest reward from the CCP for billions of dollars worth of materials and/or components for useless solar panels? Any fund manager who goes anywhere near a scam will be exposed. Any individual who encourages any private investor to contribute to a scam will be committing an unconscionable crime.
Every rational commercial project begins with a perceived demand. Spruikers for the Australian ASEAN Power Link (AAPL)[1], which is better described as the extension cord project have provided no indication of demand or need in mostly gas-fuelled Singapore for any quantity of electrical energy emanating from Australia. Nor is there any evidence of research into the Singapore electricity price structure.
Singapore’s industries[2] include 20% of the world’s ship repair, petroleum refining, major biotechnology research operations, heavily commercialised medical tourism, and frontline entities in information and communications technology. All of these entities, plus every arm of the Singapore Government, will demand unequivocal guarantees that all imported energy be wholly uninterrupted and continuous.
Do not imagine that the putative purveyors of pusillanimous power can fall back on asking Singaporeans to invest in more back-up gas turbines or any other artifice. From the beginning, supply must be totally secure and dependable, 24 hours a day.
The Basslink[3] HVDC interconnector between Victoria and Tasmania has the capacity to carry 500KW, one twentieth of the intended capacity of the extension cord. Basslink is 370km long, and cost A$800 million (in 2005 dollars) to build. We can predict that building and installing a 500KW undersea cable for 3,350 km (the theoretical minimum distance) will cost A$7.24bn in 2005 dollars. I invite any electrical engineer to confirm or correct my expectation that the cost of the cable will increase in proportion to the square root of the increase in carrying capacity. The square root of 20 is 4.472 so we calculate a cost for the undersea cable at $32bn (2005 dollars). According to the Bureau of Census and Statistics[4], $32bn in 2005 equates to $44bn in 2020, twice the $22bn falsely promoted as the total capital investment.
AAPL’s website asserts[5] that a storage facility with the capacity of 30GWh will “enable 24/7 dispatch of power”. The Highview liquid air battery[6] with a capacity of 250MWh (compared with the 150MWh capacity of the Tesla battery in South Australia) is being built near Manchester UK at a cost of A$148.25m, or A$0.593m per MWh. At the same cost per MWh, a 30GWh storage device will cost A$17.789bn.
A$17.789bn – for the claimed storage requirement alone – is more than 80% of the A$22bn figure touted as the total capital cost of the project.
The Electrical Engineering Portal[7] suggests that the capital cost of 750km of 2GW HVDC is around US$450m or A$626.4m. To adjust the cost from 2GW HVDC to 10GW HDVC we multiply by the square root of 5 which is 2.236, giving an estimate of $1.4bn. The total cost of storage and power transmission onshore and undersea is now $63.5bn, nearly three times the falsely claimed total budget.
The per MW capital cost of a solar farm in 2020 is estimated by Solar Mango[8] at £720,000 or A$1.3m. That equates to $1.304bn per GW or $13bn capital expenditure for nameplate 10GW of solar-generated electricity.
Here is how the CAPEX looks so far:
Solar Farm 10GW nameplate capacity $13.0 bn
Storage 30 GWh as proposed $17.8 bn
Transmission 750km to Darwin $1.4 bn
Undersea Cable $44.3 bn
Total $76.5 bn
The revelation that a conservative estimate of the cost is nearly three and half times the whole advertised budget should be enough to condemn this scam immediately. But it gets worse, much, much worse.
30GWH provides three hours of backup for 10GW of generation capacity. Others may make a better-informed assessment, but I estimate that guaranteeing genuine round-the-clock 10GW power will require sixty hours of backup, that is 600GWh. The cost of 600GWh of backup is $355.8bn. Even sixty hours may not be enough. Northern Territory residents report that the wet season commonly brings six or seven consecutive days when rain and cloud allow maximum ten percent functionality for solar panels.
We have not yet costed the process of obtaining permissions; from the Federal Government, from the Northern Territory Government and from all affected Aboriginal Communities. We have not costed bonds for decommissioning. We have not costed the insurance premiums required to protect the project from claims from customers when the extension cord is severed by an undersea volcano. We have not costed the PR campaign to persuade the Singaporeans that they need to import electricity and to convince them that electricity generated from intermittent sunlight can be reliably delivered. We have not yet costed the risk to worldwide economies from the possible plague of hysterical laughter when the world reads this in WUWT.
At the very best, 10GW of nameplate solar power will provide 10GW for only 40% of the time. Let’s accept that we are dealing with 100 units of time, and for 60 units of that time we need stored power. But because stored power is subject to losses, we need to generate enough stored power to cater for 75 units of time, knowing that 20% will be lost. So 10GW nameplate solar power, supported by whatever (hang the expense) backup is required, can be expected to provide (40 divided by 115 multiplied by ten) 3.478GW of continuous power. 10GW divided by 3.478GW is 2.875.
If you want to produce 10GW of reliable power, you need nameplate capacity 2.875 times 10GW, which is 28.75GW.
Readers might imagine that the total destruction of this appalling scam is complete. No, there is more to come. HVDC losses reportedly[9] approach 3% per 1,000km. 4,100 km total transmission distance means budgeting for 12% in losses off the top of potential revenue. Each GW delivered requires generation of 1.136667GW. So the nameplate capacity requirement is increased from 28.75GW to 32.679GW. Reliable continuous delivery of 10GW of solar-generated electricity to Singapore will require a capital investment of $42.62 billion in a solar farm with nameplate capacity of 32.679GW.
The capital investment required for 60 hours backup for 11.3667GW reliable output is the frightening sum of A$1,163bn, one and one-sixth trillion dollars.
The Pavakarda Solar Park[10] in the South West-Indian State Karnataka (formerly Mysore) uses 53 square kilometres for a nameplate capacity of 2.05GW. So for 10GW of nameplate capacity expect to use 259 square kilometres. If the aim is 10GW of reliably delivered power, then we multiply 259 sq km by 3.2679 to require 845 square kilometres containing $44.37bn worth of solar panels, with components built in China at a shocking environmental cost[11]. Component construction may involve slave labour[12] using materials mined in Africa very likely with slave labour.
What is a rational capital cost for supplying 3.5GW of reliable energy, which exceeds the average energy expectation of 3.478GW available from 10GW of solar panels? As reported on 5 April 2020, Poland is planning[13] to invest in nuclear reactors at US$4,500 per Kw or at today’s rate A$6,264 per Kw. That puts the capital cost of nuclear electricity generation at A$6.264m per MW or A$6.264bn per GW. For 3.5GW of safe reliable continuous nuclear energy, the capital cost is A$21.924bn, coincidentally slightly less than the A$22bn falsely claimed as capital cost by the backers of the extension cord project.
According to Schissel[14], the capital cost of a coal fired power station is around US$3,500 per Kw or A$4,872 per Kw. That puts the capital cost of coal fired electricity generation at A$4.872m per MW or A$6.264bn per GW. For 3.5GW of safe reliable continuous coal powered electricity, the capital cost is A$17.052bn, significantly less than A$22bn.
The electricity needs of Singapore or any other potential market for electricity can be well and cost-effectively served by nuclear or coal-fired power generation without any of the enormous environmental harm inherent in the extension cord project.
A coal fired power station will operate safely and reliably for more than fifty years, delivering at least seven times the energy used in all aspects of construction and decommissioning. Modern nuclear power stations may last a century and give a much higher energy return. In the unlikely event that it is ever completed, the proposed Northern Territory solar farm will function for a maximum of 30 years, by which time its output may have degraded by 8%. Nobody knows whether fifteen years might be very optimistic for the life of the gargantuan battery pack. During that 30 years of solar farm life, the extension cord project may have delivered less energy than was used in solar panel and battery construction and decommissioning. The world’s available energy may have been reduced by the project. And the profiteers will have been enriched even if not one KWh reaches Singapore.
Like Snowy Hydro, like all subsidies to unreliable energy, like the submarine contract, this unspeakably irresponsible plan must be stopped. And the PM should apologise.
This figures and logic displayed above are more than a damning indictment of one gargantuan scam. This memorandum is a warning that every proposal, anywhere, to link unreliable energy to any grid is automatically suspect. The default position is that nameplate capacity will be misrepresented as production capacity. Every estimate of cost will be recklessly understated and every estimate of performance will be deceptively exaggerated.
Despite fewer challenges, the 2009 Desertec Plan[15] for exporting solar-generated power from North Africa to Europe failed totally[16].
Australia has a highly educated parliamentarian, Rhodes Scholar the Hon Angus Taylor BEc, LLB, MPhil(Econ) MP. He bears the shameful title Minister for Energy and Emissions Reduction, which institutionalises Government war upon reliable energy and gives undeserved credence to the false tenets of the global warming cult.
The 29 July 2020 joint media release[17] attributes to Minister Taylor:
“As technologies change, we can capitalise on our strengths in renewables to continue to lead the world in energy exports.”
There are no strengths in renewables. Every increase in renewable energy inflicted on a grid weakens the nation, drives up electricity costs, impoverishes the poor and threatens the elimination of industry.
Also named in the joint Media Release is another well-educated parliamentarian, Hon Karen Andrews, BEng(Mech), CertMediation, GradDipIndRel, MP, Minister for Science and Technology. The media release admits that the intention is to spend abroad $14bn of the fictional figure $22bn, in attributing to Minister Andrews this statement:
“This project draws on Australia’s world-class solar technology and our high-tech manufacturing capability to export renewable energy on an unprecedented scale. Not only will this power link make Australia a world-leader, it will also create significant economic and employment opportunities here at home with about $8 billion of the $22 billion investment to be injected directly into Australia. It’s a strong statement to all Australians that despite the immediate challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic we will come out the other side stronger and industry is still investing in opportunities that will drive our economic recovery and create much needed jobs.”
I do not believe that either Minister uttered the statements attributed. Both statements were likely written in the Prime Ministers office and agreed to by staff of the respective Ministers. Nobody in any Ministerial Office bothered to check any of the invented and unsubstantiated propaganda which induced some negligent individual or group to bestow Major Project Status on this scam.
The time is right for these two ministers to join with other wise colleagues in telling the Prime Minister, among other things:
In the table below, columns two and three show a genuine CAPEX for the touted claims of AAPL, which despite the unacceptably high cost cannot ever deliver reliable energy. Three hours of backup for solar panels is risible. Columns four and five show a genuine CAPEX for what might work but must never be contemplated because of frightening cost.
Major Project Status was granted for a doomed project with a claimed capital cost of $22bn. The Column 3 figure of $76.604bn exceeds $22bn by 248%. End the scam now.
| Unauthorised Analysis of the intended Australian-ASEAN Power Link (AAPL) | ||||
| AAPL UNCOSTED CAPITAL EXPENDITURE COMPONENTS | CLAIMED CAPITAL EXPENDITURE | A$ bn | CAPITAL EXPENDITURE TO DELIVER 10GW RELIABLY TO SINGAPORE | A$ bn |
| Solar Farm | 10GW nameplate Average production 3.478GW, minus 12% delivery loss. | 13.041 | Reliable 10GW delivery to Singapore with nameplate 32.679GW | 42.618 |
| Storage | 30GWh (3 hours) backup. No hope of reliable delivery. | 17.789 | 60 hours backup for reliable constant output 11.37GW, delivery 10GW | 1,162.709 |
| Transmission to Darwin | 750km | 1.401 | 750km | 1.401 |
| Undersea cable 10GW | 3,350km | 44.373 | 3,350km | 44.373 |
| Unlisted items include | Approvals, Insurance, decommissioning bond, marketing | Approvals, Insurance, decommissioning bond, marketing | ||
| Total | 76.604 | Total | 1,251.101 |
In conclusion, here is a valuable extract from a recent letter from Saltbush Club[18] founder, Viv Forbes, who has inspired Australia’s defence against the destructive impact of the global warming cult:
The political war on carbon fuels has damaged the environment with forests of “green” power poles, flats of ground-sterilising solar panels, hills of bird-slicing wind turbines plus spider-webs of new power lines and roads. This mess produces unreliable expensive electricity, sterilises land, and wastes water to keep solar panels clean. And imagine the debris when a cyclone sails through a “farm” of panels or a “forest” of turbines. This expensive and unreliable power, plus green taxes and regulations, has destroyed much of Australia’s manufacturing, processing and refining industries – all for zero climate benefits. Gladstone aluminium refinery with 1,000 direct employees is a potential victim.
Abandon the climate war on carbon fuels and withdraw from the useless and destructive Paris Climate Agreement. It will never cool the climate, even if that was a sensible goal. Abolish all subsidies and taxes supporting intermittent green energy and legislate that any generator feeding into the grid must be able to supply 24/7 power, either from their own backup facilities or under contracts.
Economic recovery needs to encourage and fast-track sensible infrastructure and development proposals. We should also abolish stamp duty and capital gains tax and reduce income tax. Governments should prohibit real pollution of land, air and water, but allow farmers, fishermen, foresters, explorers, miners and entrepreneurs to get on with building and expanding their businesses.
Spread the recession pain to all protected government sectors. Cut taxes, and reduce the numbers and benefits for all in politics, bureaucracy, government media, academia and all able-bodied welfare recipients with no dependents.
[1] https://www.pv-tech.org/news/australia-grants-major-status-to-au22bn-solar-storage-and-transmission-proj
[2] https://www.worldatlas.com/articles/what-are-the-biggest-industries-in-singapore.html
[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basslink
[4] https://www.in2013dollars.com/us/inflation/2005?amount=1
[6] https://www.gov.uk/government/news/greater-manchester-to-house-to-worlds-largest-liquid-air-battery
[7] https://electrical-engineering-portal.com/analysing-the-costs-of-high-voltage-direct-current-hvdc-transmission
[8] http://www.solarmango.com/ask/2015/10/26/what-is-the-installation-cost-of-utility-scale-solar-power-plant-mw-in-the-uk/
[9] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-voltage_direct_current AND https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desertec
[10] https://www.power-technology.com/projects/pavagada-solar-park-karnataka/
[11] https://www.americanmanufacturing.org/blog/entry/the-true-cost-of-chinese-solar-panels-part-3
[12] Op. cit.
[13] https://neutronbytes.com/2020/04/05/poland-counts-costs-for-new-nuclear-reactors/
[14] https://schlissel-technical.com/docs/reports_35.pdf
[15] https://www.euractiv.com/section/trade-society/news/desertec-abandons-sahara-solar-power-export-dream/
[16] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desertec
[17] https://www.minister.industry.gov.au/ministers/karenandrews/media-releases/22b-project-power-nt-singapore-given-major-status-boost
[18] https://saltbushclub.com/
Now this is a sure sign renewables are simply boondoggles and there will be only one winner. Aussie taxpayers will, yet again, foot the bill. What do we know about under sea power transmission lines? They are very expensive to make, very expensive to lay, very expensive to retrieve and repair and generally there are two with different exit and entry points on land.
Is this project based on the premise that the sun does not shine on Singapore?
If a solar plant was capable of producing useful energy, why not build it close to the customers? Save all that transmission cost and risk.
In any case, on the best days there is up to six hours of good output in summer. Even in California, output is half in the winter. Not to mention night time.
No, it does not shine on 177 days a year, you could have googled that yourself, isn’t it? Singapore is not a desert. Took me 3 seconds to find out.
Geoff
I wouldn’t be too worried about the long term. Around 3 GW of small uncontrolled PV (< 1MW each installation) is expected to be installed this year. With Spring / Autumn minimum load at solar noon of around 13 GW this represents a decrease in minimum load of around 20%. How low this load can go before the NEM (the name of the integrated Australian east coast transmission system) becomes unstable has not been published. My guess (with no evidence whatsoever) is somewhere around 7 – 8 GW.
Personally, I would worry about November 2022 or March 2023. My guess is that it would be wise to have about 36 hours of backup in place by then.
There are multiple HVDC cables recently laid or in the process of being installed across the North Sea and Baltic.
I would think that those would give you an accurate assessment of the costs of HVDC in 2020. given that this is now a more common activity, perhaps prices are lower than in 2005?
I would have thought that the storage aspect of this is secondary: most of the time available solar will be transported and used immediately…
And just how do you propose to provide power during the hours of darkness, Griff?
Without storage, the lights go out….but since the storage requirement would have to be colossal to guarantee power 24/7, we know the lights will go out anyway! Oh dear!
Because like Catweazle he “believes” it’s all “electrickery”.
ah! Catweazle! Hadn’t thought about that in years…
grifter, Singaporeans aren’t as dumb as some Europeans/Brits (or Australians or Americans for that matter).
Hilarious – a $76.5 billion undefended asset laid through some of the most pirate infested waters in Asia. What could possibly go wrong?
Eric,,, go wrong?
A rise in the price of black market scrap copper?
What are we going to do about that AEMO report I mentioned here? Geoff S
I have to say, I was thinking the same thing.
WUWT contributors all,
My grateful thanks to Charles the Moderator for allowing me this opportunity.
it is humbling experience to enjoy the support and encouragement of so many wise individuals and I have learned a great deal by reading your comments. Emails will be very welcome at michael@michaeldarby.net.
We all face a challenge. How is it that not one respondent has identified as a lady? How can we save civilisation from deliberate destruction by the global warming cult if our ranks are bereft of women? What can we do to redress this disappointing dire damsel dearth?
I’m sure we can come up with some ideas Michael, but first we have to get past your appalling abuse of alliteration 🙂
(Bugger – now you’ve got me doing it!)
Undersea energy cable from Australia to Singapore? ROFLMAO. Even considering how idiotic some of these people are, it’ll never happen.
Does it come with the space elevator too? and the space-based solar array aimed at earth?
Michael Darby-
Thanks for a very interesting and well researched article. But I think you need to explain something for us non-Australian readers. You write “Australia has granted major project status to AU$22bn solar, storage and transmission project…”
Apparently the government granting “major project status” is some kind of official recognition. Could you explain this further? Does it mean the government will have some kind of financial interest, either directly or by guaranteeing loans or bonds?
Why on earth would you put the storage facility at the point of production and not the point of use?
Talk about making an inefficient system even more inefficient.
old engineer
You have raised a very important question which I should have addressed. Major Project Status is explained at this Federal Government website: https://www.business.gov.au/Grants-and-Programs/Major-Project-Status
The necessary criteria are listed, including:
“3. The project has sufficient financial resources and is commercially viable. Developers need to show that the project has attracted enough funding, at least enough to complete the approval processes. You’ll need evidence of adequate funding and support such as:
>evidence of support from governments and communities
>resolutions of support from the board of a parent company
>a letter of support from a parent company or investor
>letters of intent, heads of agreement or other commercial documents, offtake and supply agreements, audited company accounts
>feasibility studies, business case or financial viability assessments.”
The probability is high that no attempt was made to satisfy these criteria, and we are entitled to conclude that no responsible person in government made any effort to review the claims or check the numbers.
The term “scandal” is appropriate.
The problem we face is the mentality at all levels of government that any plan to destroy reliable energy, however irrational, must be automatically supported.
The world faces a grave threat because COVID-19 has increased the opportunities for recklessly irrational destructive behaviour by governments. Governments parrot statements such as “Extraordinary times call for extraordinary measures.” This is a very false concept. Extraordinary times require maximum caution in decision making, which must be based upon historical precedents for wise decision making in the face of danger or disaster, and careful analysis of the consequences of all decisions.
WUWT brings together thinking people worldwide. WUWT thinkers reject dangerous attitudes common to political leaders who have never been trained by the market place to feel the impacts of their own exercise of judgement. Australia now demonstrates the concept: “Something must be done! This is something.”
Thanks for explanation and the link. I certainly agree with you that the term “scandal” is appropriate.
I did not see this specific topic in the article, where the not insignificant conversion losses are included in the costs.
That is, Direct Current (DC) produced by the alleged renewables are not transmittable over long distance.
Forcing Australia to convert DC into Alternating Current (AC) prior to transmission.
Perhaps the Manhattan Institute Report should include mining smelting and refining costs for the copper in that extension cord? Plus the fossil fuel derived wire coatings.
er… no.
An HVDC line transmits as direct current.
There have been a number of advances in HVDC technology (in current conversion at each end) in recent years
Thank you all for helpful comments, many of which have been incorporated in a revision which is at http://michaeldarby.net/Scam.pdf
Good wishes
This is the Northern Territory ‘s submarine project. Really in the never never!
As the Obama Administration said, “We don’t pick winners.”
That was great spin wording for their special ops efforts to fund losers with special connections politically.