Australia wants to become a renewable energy superpower. Can it?
Hannah Ritchie,BBC News, Sydney
Hidden among thick bushland in the outer suburbs of southern Sydney sits an expansive facility housing a technological breakthrough.
Itâs here that Australian company SunDrive Solar makes its âspecial sauceâ: a new – top secret – formula that it says has solved âa very high value problemâ.
Its big innovation? Finding a way to replace the silver used in solar cells with copper, which was previously thought impossible.
âSilver is expensive, scarce and environmentally disastrous, and it limits how much solar can be rolled out around the world,â explains chief commercial officer Maia Schweizer.
âCopper is also highly in demand, but it’s 1,000 times more abundant, and 100 times lower cost.â
The start-up is one of the beneficiaries of the governmentâs Future Made in Australia plan – a suite of policies that aim to turn the country into a ârenewable energy superpowerâ by investing in homegrown green industries.
But some experts question whether the $A22.7bn ($15bn; ÂŁ11.8bn) package, which comprises tax incentives, loans, and kick-starter grants – is enough to meet those lofty ambitions.
And climate scientists say that if Australia wants to be a major player in the net zero transition, it needs to stop peddling fossil fuels.
Australiaâs economy has long been powered by its natural resources, such as coal, gas and iron ore.
But its critical minerals – many of which underpin crucial low emissions technologies – are exported raw, and refined abroad, predominantly by China.
Itâs a dig-and-ship model of trade that has earned Australia a reputation as the worldâs quarry, and seen it lose out on a significant chunk of change further up the supply chain.
Lithium – which is used in the batteries that store renewable energy and power electric vehicles – is one example.
Despite being responsible for more than half of the worldâs supply, Australia captures just 0.5% of the global $57bn lithium battery market, according to the countryâs national science agency.
The Future Made in Australia policy – which was formally announced in April – seeks to change that, by offering tax breaks and loans to companies seeking to process critical minerals at home.
Doing so, the government argues, is a national security priority, as countries examine their trade dependence on Beijing, and look to insulate themselves against supply chain shocks.
âThis is not old-fashioned protectionism or isolationism â it is the new competition,â Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said, when announcing the plan.
âWe need to aim high, be bold, and build big, to match the size of the opportunity in front of us.â
Queensland-based Alpha HPA is one of the companies the government has tapped to execute its vision.
Like SunDrive, it views itself as a disruptor, due to its ability to create ultra-high purity aluminium products – used in things like semiconductors and iPhones – with a lower carbon footprint than overseas competitors.
Thanks to a A$400m federal loan, it is building one of the worldâs largest alumina refineries near the coastal city of Gladstone, which it says will create hundreds of local jobs.
Itâs a huge source of pride, given that there is still scepticism over whether Australia can make things, after decades of outsourcing its manufacturing to China, Alpha HPAâs chief operating officer Rob Williamson says.
âAnybody that puts forward the case that we don’t have people in this country to do [this work] is just not trying,” he adds.
SunDrive is on a similar journey.
Without government support, Ms Schweizer says, the company might have moved offshore.
Instead, it’s looking to transform one of the countryâs oldest coal power stations into a massive solar panel manufacturing hub.
Currently, one in three Australian households have solar panels, the highest rate in the world, and yet only 1% are made locally – with China responsible for more than 80% of global production.
âEvery single mineral that you need to make a solar panel, we’ve got one of the top three reserves in the world,â Ms Schweizer explains.
âNow there’s the possibility of the end-to-end value chain coming onshore in Australia for the first time, which is super, super exciting.â
The Made in Australia pledge has won the support of the countryâs biggest renewable energy industry trade bodies, who say the investments could be âgame changingâ.
âItâs a big opportunity for us to be an exporter of climate solutions to the world instead of climate problems,â John Grimes, who heads the Smart Energy Council, says.
But some climate experts warn it is being âseverely underminedâ by the governmentâs recent decision to champion gas until 2050 and beyond despite global calls to rapidly phase out fossil fuels.
âWeâre sending a really mixed message to investors,â says Polly Hemming, the director of the Australia Instituteâs climate and energy programme.
âThis government has continued to approve new gas and coal projects – it’s flown to Japan, India, Korea, and Vietnam to secure long-term markets for gas and coal.
âIf we really wanted to be a green energy superpower, we wouldnât be relentlessly pursuing customers for our fossil fuels,â she says.
One of the nationâs leading climate scientists agrees.
âThere is a very deep contradiction at the heart of the two policies,â says Prof Bill Hare, chief executive of Climate Analytics and author of numerous UN climate change reports.
âThe Future Made in Australia [plan] is playing second fiddle to the governmentâs gas strategy.â
To understand how, Ms Hemming says you need to âfollow the moneyâ.
According to an analysis from her thinktank, last year alone, state and federal governments spent A$14.5bn subsidising fossil fuel use across Australia, and that sum is only expected to balloon, according to budget estimates.
By contrast, she says the A$13.7bn set aside to process critical minerals and incubate Australiaâs nascent green hydrogen industry âisnât real moneyâ.
Thatâs because it will take the form of tax breaks over the course of a decade, which can only be cashed in on production starting from 2027 â a model which policymakers say will ensure taxpayers’ money is not wasted.
But all the green hydrogen projects – many of which are being led by the nationâs largest mining and energy companies – are yet to be built. And the incentives could be scrapped before they get off the ground if thereâs a change in government.
âItâs like me having a healthy eating and junk food policy running at the same time in my home and telling my kids, âYou can have $10 a week now if you keep eating junk food’,” says Ms Hemming.
“Or, ‘I’ll give you $2 in 2027 if you switch to broccoliâ. What do you think they are going to prioritise?”
Some energy experts have also cast doubt over the business rationale behind green hydrogen – given the industry is still in its infancy and riddled with unknowns.
Others worry it could divert investment away from the renewable power sources that have already proven their worth, resulting in delayed climate action.
But Mr Grimes says that green hydrogen will play an essential role in âstripping emissionsâ out of Australiaâs carbon-intensive mining sector – as companies look for cheap green sources of fuel to continue powering their operations.
And bigger picture, he argues that the governmentâs new green investments should be assessed as âa milestone first stepâ rather than an end point.
âThe government knows that if it doesnât pivot beyond its exports of coal, gas and iron ore soon, Australia risks becoming the Kodak economy of the future: a big deal one day and completely irrelevant the next.â
Australia isnât the only country looking to position itself as the engine room of the new green economy.
Dozens of nations are putting forward ambitious proposals, such as the European Unionâs Green Deal or Americaâs gargantuan Inflation Reduction Act.
Globally, policymakers have already invested over A$2tn in clean energy initiatives since 2020, according to the International Energy Agency.
But Australia has some compelling natural advantages, such as enviable wind and solar capabilities, stores of critical minerals and rare earths, and a strong mining infrastructure network that can be repurposed.
If used correctly, all the experts the BBC spoke with agreed it has every chance of securing its place as a critical green trading partner among allies.
Getting there though, they say, will require even greater investment – particularly in research and development, which is currently at 30-year lows.
And theyâve warned that the government canât afford to drag its feet – a point which Mr Albanese himself has addressed head on.
âWe have to get cracking. We have unlimited potential, but we do not have unlimited time.
âIf we donât seize this moment, it will pass. If we donât take this chance, we wonât get another. If we donât act to shape the future, the future will shape us.â