logo
Diggers and Dealers panel questions Australia's energy future and emissions target

Diggers and Dealers panel questions Australia's energy future and emissions target

Duelling perspectives on Australia's transition to renewables and whether it is dead in the water have played out on the floor of one of the country's major annual mining conferences.
More than 2,300 delegates are in Kalgoorlie-Boulder, 600 kilometres east of Perth, for the annual Diggers and Dealers Mining Forum, bringing the industry's practical and financial arms together for the 34th time in Western Australia's gold mining capital.
While this year's gathering comes amid a surging gold price, questions over housing the industry's local workforce, and shaky futures for nickel and rare earths, organisers chose to shine a spotlight on the future and feasibility of Australia's shift to renewables.
While miners, particularly in remote parts of Western Australia, have followed the state's smaller communities in setting up their own independent renewable energy infrastructure, the forum's keynote panel questioned the likelihood of renewables meeting the nation's total energy needs.
The panel, featuring Canadian nuclear energy advocate Chris Keefer and Centre for Independent Studies (CIS) director of energy research Aidan Morrison, urged attendees to question the assumptions being made by industry and political leaders.
"There is no serious intellectual defence for the prospect we'd meet net-zero targets in 2050," Mr Morrison said.
He told the forum that the transition to a fully renewable grid was only being propelled by increasingly generous state and federal subsidies.
"Forcibly intubated and resuscitated by government subsidies," he said.
"It shows what it looks like to have a resuscitated zombie coming to life, the dead starting to walk again."
Dr Keefer said nations such as Australia and Canada were getting caught up in a geopolitical fight over energy between China and the United States that they had no part in.
"The levers of emissions reduction are not really in the hands of countries like Canada and Australia anymore," he said.
"In Inner Mongolia, [China is] building what they call 'energy bases' — something like 6 gigawatts of solar, similar amounts of wind and batteries.
"But also coal, mine-mouth coal, 4 to 5 gigawatts."
The panel, moderated by broadcaster and CIS executive director Tom Switzer, also questioned the feasibility of renewables powering Australia's enormous grids on the largest possible scale.
"As if we're some singular, big bucket where if it's sunny somewhere, it's immediately shareable somewhere else on the continent," Mr Morrison said.
"If you think about that from a cold, hard engineering perspective, it is absolutely bonkers."
Others at the conference were more positive about renewables and pointed to smaller, localised successes.
Australia's first "net-zero" gold mine was announced at the forum late on Tuesday.
Bellevue Resources managing director Darren Stralow said the mine, 40km north of Leinster in the northern Goldfields, recorded net-zero carbon emissions for the first half of 2025.
"It's allowed us to work with some like-minded partners, to see if there's a benefit to that in terms of revenue, and to look to sell our gold in a bit of a different way."
The mine is forecast to be 80–90 per cent powered by renewable energy, the highest penetration in Australia.
For Regis Resources managing director Jim Beyer, renewables were a question of economics rather than advocacy.
"For a remote mine site, renewables make good economic sense," Mr Beyer said.
"At Duketon [1,000km north-east of Perth] we put in a solar farm and it saved us diesel.
It is a similar story with wind and solar infrastructure at the remote Tropicana Gold Mine, about 1,000km east of Perth.
"Power there runs off gas," Mr Beyer said.
"But when the blades are turning and the sun's out … it's cost-sensible as well as carbon reduction."
Resources Minister Madeleine King pointed to heavy renewable energy investment at the Kathleen Valley Lithium Mine and the Bellevue Gold Mine, while reiterating the government's position.
"I don't mind people having an opinion; I don't share that opinion," she said, in response to the keynote panel's comments.
Her West Australian counterpart, David Michael, said there would be no shift in the government's position on uranium mining, ruling out any further approvals following those granted by the Barnett Liberal Government in 2017.
Deep Yellow's project at Mulga Rock, estimated to be Australia's third-largest untapped uranium resource, is the only project in WA free to proceed under current laws.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Melbourne students protesting against the Gaza conflict block the city
Melbourne students protesting against the Gaza conflict block the city

News.com.au

timean hour ago

  • News.com.au

Melbourne students protesting against the Gaza conflict block the city

About 300 student protesters have blocked one of Melbourne CBD's main intersections as they rallied against the Gaza conflict. The group marched from the State Library to Flinders St they sat in the middle of the intersection for about 60 minutes on Thursday. Police moved on one man who breached the peace and five other protesters were arrested for obstructing the roadway. They are expected to be charged on summons. The protest was part of nationwide action organised by the National Union of Students and Students for Palestine, which called for a student referendum on Gaza. The students want to vote no confidence in the Australian government alleging it has been complicit in the genocide in Gaza and to end weapons trade with Israel. National Union of Students education officer James McVicar said in a video posted to social media they would continue to stand against war and any politician or political party that endorsed war or unprovoked acts of aggression. Flinders Street has since reopened.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store