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Australian Energy Producers Journal Australian Energy Producers Journal Society
Journal of Australian Energy Producers
 

Session 27. Oral Presentation for: Planning challenges for the changing paradigm of gas-powered generation operations

Joe Lane A *
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Gas & Energy Transition Research Centre, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.




Joe Lane is a Senior Research Fellow at the University of Queensland Gas & Energy Transition Research Centre (UQ-GET), leading the Centre’s Energy Security research theme. His research explores energy transition trade-offs from multiple perspectives, including the risks arising from interconnection across the electricity and gas systems.

* Correspondence to: joe.lane@uq.edu.au

Australian Energy Producers Journal 65, EP24549 https://doi.org/10.1071/EP24549
Published: 19 June 2025

© 2025 The Author(s) (or their employer(s)). Published by CSIRO Publishing on behalf of Australian Energy Producers. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC)

Abstract

Presented on 29 May 2025: Session 27

Gas-powered generation (GPG) will become increasingly critical for keeping the lights on in the east-coast electricity system (the National Electricity Market, NEM). However, energy transition planners still too often assume that GPG, and its gas supply, can continue being perfectly responsive to fluctuating electricity system demand. Multiple perspectives and historical experience suggest this is a poorly founded assumption. We illustrate the risks to NEM resilience, and the planning challenges for the gas sector, by implementing a deep-dive re-model of Australian Energy Market Operator’s (AEMO) 2024 Integrated System Plan (ISP-2024) Step Change scenario. Using AEMO’s own weather scenarios, the volatility in GPG demand will increase to levels far exceeding anything experienced historically in either the electricity or domestic gas supply systems. We also develop our own estimates of renewable energy zone (REZ)-level variable renewable energy (VRE) resource potential, back-cast over an 80-year historical record. This indicates that AEMO’s reliance on only 13 years of weather data is insufficient to capture the full range of possible winter wind production in southern states. This represents a substantial increase in the rate of gas supply (to GPG) that might be required, unanticipated by AEMO’s modelling approach. Infrastructure planning to support the coming energy transition, will need to pay far greater attention to the inherent uncertainty in estimates of future GPG demand.

To access the Oral Presentation click the link on the right. To read the full paper click here

Keywords: energy transition, gas powered generation, gas supply, GPG, NEM, renewable energy, uncertainty analysis, VRE.

Biographies

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Joe Lane is a Senior Research Fellow at the University of Queensland Gas & Energy Transition Research Centre (UQ-GET), leading the Centre’s Energy Security research theme. His research explores energy transition trade-offs from multiple perspectives, including the risks arising from interconnection across the electricity and gas systems.