Labor condemned for supporting Kurri Kurri gas

February 9, 2022
Issue 
Activists outside Hydro Aluminium Kurri Kurri. Photo: Gas Free Hunter Alliance/Facebook

After initially criticising it, federal Labor is now backing a new gas-fired power station atĀ KurriĀ KurriĀ in the New South Wales Hunter Valley.

Opposition leader Anthony Albanese said on February 1 that he not only had changed his mind but, if elected, he would pump even more money into it.

The federal government has tasked the government-owned Snowy Hydro with the $. Even Snowy Hydro admits the Kurri Kurri gas project will only generate electricity for short periods of time.

Laborā€™s energy spokesperson Chris Bowen once said ā€œeconomics or the engineeringā€ did not justify its construction, but Albanese said it will now support the project provided it runs on an initial 30% ā€œgreenā€ hydrogen energy source, with the aim of it reaching 100% ā€œas soon as possibleā€.

Bruce Robertson from the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis said Laborā€™s decision to support KurriĀ Kurri gasĀ would lead to higher electricity prices. ā€œThis project isĀ poorly located on a gas line that cannot even supply it with sufficientĀ gas and is now proposed to be powered by hydrogen, a technology thatā€™s unproven and whose costs are unknown,ā€ he said.

ā€œThe electricity market doesnā€™t even need theĀ KurriĀ KurriĀ gas-fired power station, as sufficientĀ capacity has already been added to replace the closure of the Liddell coal power station.ā€

He said if the Labor Party really wanted to support the ā€œnascent hydrogen industryā€, it would be better to do so on a smaller scale first ā€œto see if it works and can be scaled upā€.

Fiona Lee, Coordinator of the Gas Free Hunter Alliance (GFHA), said it would be better for governments to support renewable energy technologies and focus on sustainable jobs. ā€œAny power station that burns more fossil fuels, like gas, is worsening climate change,ā€ Lee said. ā€œWe want to see the $600 million of public money spent supporting and retraining workers.ā€

Energy analyst Bruce Mountain, writing in the February 2 The Conversation said theĀ KurriĀ KurriĀ power station would be ā€œa government-built white elephantā€ and that ā€œretrofitting it to burn hydrogen would be so expensive as to be unrealisticā€. Burning hydrogen for power ā€œis about the least useful thing you can do with itā€.

Niko Leka, who is standing for the Socialist Alliance in the NSW Senate, said Labor is trying to walk both sides of the fence ā€” trying to blunt the National Partyā€™s pro-coal and gas attacks while also trying to appear slightly more disposed to renewable energy.

ā€œThis is a doomed strategy,ā€ Leka said, pointing to the same approach it took with the Adani coal mine in the Galilee Basin. "It will lose support from both camps, because it will prolong the death agony of the fossil fuel industry and undermine the struggle to tackle climate change in a serious way.ā€

The Socialist Alliance is campaigning for real action to tackle the climate emergency which includes a planned shift to 100% renewable energy within 5ā€“10 years via public investment and emission reduction targets and with a focus on assisting fossil fuel workers find new jobs.

ā€œWe donā€™t need the Kurri Kurri gas plant, or the Narrabri coal seam gas project and its associated gas pipeline from the Pilliga. But the science dictates that we do need governments to commit to a fast transition, and Labor is signalling that it will not,ā€ Leka said.

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