How doesn't it make economic sense? Please explain your theory, instead of just repeating what you've heard the so called "experts" repeatedly say.rubberman wrote: ↑Tue Mar 28, 2023 8:07 pmPeople are voting for this because many of us can see that coal plants don't make economic sense. There was a coal favouring government in power for 9 years, and still the power generators weren't prepared to invest. There were even credible reports of Frydenberg putting pressure on AGL to extend the life of the existing plants. Plants which have failed each year since due to old age and decrepitude...costing AGL shareholders over a $100m in lost revenue each time. Alinta shut down Leigh Creek and the Port Augusta power stations, and made no attempt whatsoever to renew them. Something they could easily have done.claybro wrote: ↑Tue Mar 28, 2023 7:17 pm
Why would they spend money on equipment that is being deliberately run out of business and told there is no futire market for them in a hostile environment such as Austrlalia?
India, China, Indonesia, Africa are building hundreds of the things. Just because a merchant bank wont lend money (banks which by the way are raking in billions in government renewable subsidies), doesn't mean a government cant weigh up risk, and fund the coal plants themselves. Obviously other countries are seeing the benefit/ necessity, so someone is funding them.-Are you denying there are hundreds of new coal plants under construction worldwide, when we were told the world is moving away from coal?
Coal and gas for that matter certainly do add to prices, as the market is set up to promote renewables, and penalise fossil fuel generation. The puzzle is, people are voting for this...but then seem surprised when prices are so high, and the East Coast market sometimes struggles to supply enough power.rubberman wrote: ↑Tue Mar 28, 2023 5:02 pmI'm saying that if new coal plants are built, to compare like for like economically, they too would cause a spike in prices. Why does that sound unreasonable to you? Building coal plants isn't cheap. Is it so hard to accept that price increases would be required were they to be built?
Finally, those governments guaranteeing coal plants being built are just accepting that taxes will have to go up to pay for them. When you add those costs to the power charges to get the total cost, you get the same answer: coal makes no economic sense. Now, by all means, if an honest case is made, and the total costs of coal are presented and people are ok with it, then you have a case at least. If neither the power generators nor the previous government were able to do that, didn't even try, then it's clear that the economic case sucked.
You keep repeating this line, but there's no substance in your posts to back it up. You also ignore the realities that exist, that it's not about costs, but about the climate culturalists or cult as I call them pushing this, the global push at least in most western nations, to turn away from fossil fuels and turn to renewables instead.
You also ignore that while we've been largely de-industrialized, the countries that have industrialized with our manufacturing largely moving to their shores, are the ones building these new fossil fuel power plants. And they're polluting at a greater rate then we ever have given how large their populations are, and will do so for many decades to come.