On a bright, breezy afternoon in Western Australia’s agricultural south west, something seems amiss. The wind is blowing, but in the distance, giant wind turbines — each capable of powering thousands of homes at a time — are barely moving at all.

A wind farm is producing next to no power, and it is not because there is not enough wind available. In fact, there is too much — or rather too much renewable energy supply and not enough demand in WA in this moment.

This is an example of curtailment, the process of throttling or spilling energy production in excess of demand, and it is a key feature to watch as Australia’s electricity system evolves.

The reason it is happening is a profound surge of renewable energy generation in the country. In October, for the first time ever, clean en…

Similar Posts

Loading similar posts...

Keyboard Shortcuts

Navigation
Next / previous item
j/k
Open post
oorEnter
Preview post
v
Post Actions
Love post
a
Like post
l
Dislike post
d
Undo reaction
u
Recommendations
Add interest / feed
Enter
Not interested
x
Go to
Home
gh
Interests
gi
Feeds
gf
Likes
gl
History
gy
Changelog
gc
Settings
gs
Browse
gb
Search
/
General
Show this help
?
Submit feedback
!
Close modal / unfocus
Esc

Press ? anytime to show this help