Collie River Valley Bulletin, February 9, 2023

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COLLIE RIVER VALLEY

BULLETIN Published by LOCALS for LOCALS

Closure questioned Thursday, February 9, 2023

EDITION No. 119

MINING and Energy Union WA division secretary Greg Busson is confident Bluewaters Power Station will continue to operate past 2029. “I bet my bottom dollar that Bluewaters will stay as long as it can,” he said this week. His comments come after modelling released in the Australian Energy Market Operator’s (AEMO) latest assessment report of WA's domestic gas needs for the next 10 years could see the only privately-owned power station close at the same time as state-owned power generators. AEMO forecast a major bump in demand for gas-fired power generation from 2030 as coal retirements took effect.

The report states the domestic gas market could be pushed further into deficit if coal supply continues to be restricted, leading to an increased demand for gas generation. “AEMO is closely monitoring the coal supply situation in WA,” the report states. AEMO’s modelling projects that increasing renewables penetration will be insufficient to fully compensate for the loss of coal-fired baseload power and gas generation will have to increase to complement renewable generation. But Mr Busson said he is predicting Bluewaters would be the backup for power in WA to compensate for the clo-

sure of state-owned power stations. He questioned the reliability of gas power, and pointed out that there has not been any more approvals for renewable power storage. “I am confident Bluewaters will continue,” he said. “The government needs the baseload, and in terms of gas as the base, well I would like to know how that would be done. There’s more at risk of something going wrong with gas than coal in the ground in Collie.” He said conversations he has had on site are focused on the company fulfilling its contract to 2035. “The government is actively working

$2.50

on a solution for the issues with Griffin and hopefully they can get a resolution before the state agreement expires in June.” Member for the South West Steve Thomas said with the State Government closing nearly 1000 megawatts of capacity, losing the 440 megawatts at Bluewaters would make the situation even worse. “No wonder the government is throwing away hundreds of millions of dollars importing Newcastle coal to Collie and propping up Griffin,” he said. “It is desperate to keep the lights on in Perth, but with such a poor plan it will certainly fail in coming years.”

Dramatic RIVER IS SLOWLY DYING decrease for coal

HELP OUR RIVER: Local river conservationist Dennis True is concerned the Collie River is being choked by introduced trees. He and fellow river conservationist Ed Riley believe the river is unhealthy and dying a slow death. Story on page 3.

COAL-fired generation reached an alltime low of 438 megawatts in the fourth quarter of 2022. This is according to the Australian Energy Market Operator’s (AEMO) quarterly energy dynamics report, which outlined that coal generation was 42 percent lower than the same quarter in the previous year. The report states this was caused by a reduction in facility availability due to coal preservation and ensuring adequate stockpiles for summer. To offset the coal decrease, gas-fired generation increased by an average of 213 MW (+35 percent), with gas supplying 37.4 percent of underlying demand on average, making it the primary fuel type throughout the quarter.

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Articles inside

Giblett gets the double

1min
page 19

Berm up to standard

2min
page 19

BBBBBBBB SSSSB Double win for Collie Basketball Association

1min
page 18

BBBBBBBB TTTTBT SBTSBSBT

1min
page 18

Hanns grasps opportunity

4min
pages 15-17

Virtual office switched on

1min
page 15

Ollie makes it home at last

2min
page 14

Fate sets wedding date

1min
page 11

Love is in the air

0
page 11

Support roles fulfill like no other

2min
page 10

Show went on with Judy Show went on with Judy

4min
page 9

Virtual office now open

2min
pages 8-9

Don't vilify our history

2min
page 8

Spring clean in… summer?

0
page 8

Transition brings free skill training

2min
page 7

Hart rides for the kids

1min
page 7

Italiano secures her second fashions sash

1min
page 6

1000 expected for ultra

2min
page 6

Parking problem crosses line

2min
page 5

Snappy fix to problems

2min
pages 3-4

River is slowly dying Conservationists:

1min
page 3

Arson charge follows fire

3min
page 2

Spate of fires at weekend

1min
page 2

Small

1min
pages 1-2

Dramatic decrease for coal

0
page 1

RIVER IS SLOWLY DYING

0
page 1

Closure questioned

1min
page 1
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