Welcome!

By registering with us, you'll be able to discuss, share and private message with other members of our community.

Sign Up Now!

Australian news and politics.

While I totally agree that batteries and projects like South Australia’s Project EnergyConnect are revolutionary, they highlight rather than dismiss the massive grid integration challenge ahead.

South Australia’s new $2.3 billion transmission line proves that localised batteries alone cannot handle massive renewable gluts;....

The state physically required a massive "extension cord" to NSW to export excess power and maintain stability. Furthermore, relying on "batteries on wheels" (EVs) ignores human behaviour, as cars are rarely plugged into bidirectional chargers during peak midday solar curtailment..


And transitioning from 45% to 82% renewables isn't a linear progression of adding cheaper generation. It requires completely re-engineering the grid's underlying infrastructure and it's physics, replacing the mechanical inertia of retiring coal plants, and building extensive new transmission infrastructure to connect remote energy zones.

This generation tech is cheap, but the humongous system integration costs break the bank.


Fir example, the skyrocketing commodity and labour inflation have driven transmission asset costs up by onwards of 50% and it's climbing. Also the achieving of grid reliability requires overbuilding capacity threefold to combat winter lows, alongside billions in community compensation payouts to secure vital grid land.

And whike their intentions are of course good, the green lobby often treats the grid like a giant Lego set...

They assume that if you just snap cheap wind and solar pieces together, a clean grid magically appears for free. But they routinely ignore the staggering cost of the "glue" required to hold those pieces together.

There is a massive disconnect between "spreadsheet engineering" and real-world economics.
As I approach retirement, I can tell you all of my life there have been arguments about the grid. It's design, maintenance and future development. 50 years of hearing the same thing. Even if renewables or climate change is not a thing, the grid requires maintenance and replacement (should it be buried? age old question whcih the state coalition said they would back in 2010 - of course it never happened because of the cost). However, power continues to be delivered to homes and businesses.
 
  • Like
Reactions: LFC
I'm sure she let her borrow her plane because she's just a really good mate and obviously not to have subtle influence over policy decisions that would benefit her.
I'm no fan of Rinehart but that's pretty laughable coming from Dim Jim who's party has been beholden to the unions & their thugs for decades.

Look no further than the basketcase that is Victoria under Labor who let John Setka and his CFMEU goons run wild for years.
 
I'm no fan of Rinehart but that's pretty laughable coming from Dim Jim who's party has been beholden to the unions & their thugs for decades.

Look no further than the basketcase that is Victoria under Labor who let John Setka and his CFMEU goons run wild for years.

The unions are an organised collection of workers who advocate for their members. Gina Rinehart is a mining billionaire. I know which of those two I'd prefer a political party to be beholden to.

I know a lot of people are struggling, but it depresses me that so many think the answer to their problems is a party who is outwardly racist, outwardly denies climate change and is heavily influenced by a mining billionaire who's previously advocated for $2 an hour wages.

People seem to want to vote One Nation because "it can't get any worse". It can get so much worse.
 
The unions are an organised collection of workers who advocate for their members. Gina Rinehart is a mining billionaire. I know which of those two I'd prefer a political party to be beholden to.

I know a lot of people are struggling, but it depresses me that so many think the answer to their problems is a party who is outwardly racist, outwardly denies climate change and is heavily influenced by a mining billionaire who's previously advocated for $2 an hour wages.

People seem to want to vote One Nation because "it can't get any worse". It can get so much worse.
You and I both know the reason why people are flocking to One Nation.

Like our siblings in the UK, the public is fed up with the major parties and they are angry at the government's outright refusal to halt immigration (it has got worse), the public sees immigration as part of the reason for the housing crisis and is demanding someone do something about it.

I'm no One Nation supporter but I too think immigration is way out of control and has been for years and I've always said whoever proposes to sort out that issue has my vote.
 
Immigration and house prices are probably the hottest topics in Australia right now, and experts say they are inextricably linked when discussing what the country’s future looks like.

One Nation says it made “no apologies” for prioritising Australians in plans to slash the migration intake, in a move that could precede dramatic property price and rent falls similar to those experienced in New Zealand and Canada.

 
The unions are an organised collection of workers who advocate for their members. Gina Rinehart is a mining billionaire. I know which of those two I'd prefer a political party to be beholden to.

I know a lot of people are struggling, but it depresses me that so many think the answer to their problems is a party who is outwardly racist, outwardly denies climate change and is heavily influenced by a mining billionaire who's previously advocated for $2 an hour wages.

People seem to want to vote One Nation because "it can't get any worse". It can get so much worse.


Unfortunately much of the union movement have been captured by a progressive leadership class, shifting focus from core worker issues like pay and safety toward social activism and cultural campaigns which have totally alienated their traditional blue-collar base.

The argument is that a factory worker, miner, or nurse wants their fees spent strictly on securing better pay, safer conditions, and job stability, rather than on broader social or cultural ideological battles.

My father who was a senior union official himself for three decades would certainly advocate that notion....

He'd say that the "Left" has lost touch with its economic roots and it's a major point of friction in contemporary politics. Many traditional voters feel the party has pivoted toward a middle-class, urban voter base, prioritising climate policy and progressive social issues over the immediate financial survival of their once working-class base....
 
Close to half-a-million foreigners have arrived in Australia during the past year with an increasing number of international students staying in the country on a bridging visa when they graduate rather than returning home.

 
Close to half-a-million foreigners have arrived in Australia during the past year with an increasing number of international students staying in the country on a bridging visa when they graduate rather than returning home.


From the article....

International students are able to work 48 hours a fortnight during a semester, and the Government has tried to crack down on dubious vocational colleges that entice them to switch to their lower-fee courses from a university degree.....

It is easy to see why this issue stirs up so much frustration. When people talk about international education, the expectation is that it is a system built on learning and mutual benefit. When it starts looking more like a transactional backdoor scam for work rights, it can feel incredibly cynical even to those who generally support immigration.
 
A while back there was a discussion on fertility rates. The following Financial Times video adds a new correlation to smartphones & social media. Note that the researcher stresses that it is in the mix rather than the cause:
 
it depresses me that so many think the answer to their problems is a party who is outwardly racist, outwardly denies climate change ...

You can bet your dog's life that the people who say Pauline Hanson and One Nation are "racist" -- and the same ones who, when asked, will struggle to give a precise definition of "racism" as they use that word -- just as they will also struggle to define what is a
 
You can bet your dog's life that the people who say Pauline Hanson and One Nation are "racist" -- and the same ones who, when asked, will struggle to give a precise definition of "racism" as they use that word -- just as they will also struggle to define what is a
Correct. Nailed it from 40 yards and the crowd goes wild.
 
He is wrong (to the extent the post is coherent, and it largely isn’t).

Pauline Hanson is unambiguously a racist, and I know what that word means.
In fairness, the word is thrown around so liberally by the Left in general these days it no longer has any meaning.

All that has done has provided cover to legitimate racists.
 
In fairness, the word is thrown around so liberally by the Left in general these days it no longer has any meaning.

All that has done has provided cover to legitimate racists.
Is it though? Can you give an example you have seen of the “Left” unjustifiably calling something racist when it wasn’t?

She does and says unambiguously racist shit all the time, surely you accept that.
 


:LOL:
 
Is it though? Can you give an example you have seen of the “Left” unjustifiably calling something racist when it wasn’t?

She does and says unambiguously racist shit all the time, surely you accept that.
 


:LOL:
Piss off back to Reddit with the rest of the far left whackjobs.

The Shovel is a satirical site in the same way Betoota is.
 
Back
Top