Australia's Energy Shift: Renewables Overtake Coal Amid Grid Expansion Challenges and Cost Reductions
January 29, 2026
AEMO warned of ongoing challenges, including maintaining system strength when synchronous generators dip below minimum, and curtailment of wind and solar due to transmission constraints.
Modelling suggests reaching about 82% renewables could yield wholesale costs near $91/MWh, informing long-term cost optimization and competitiveness.
The broader context emphasizes energy security and affordability pressures on households, with policy and market responses shaping wholesale and retail costs.
AEMO described the December quarter as a turning point in Australia’s energy transition, with renewables and storage increasingly displacing coal and gas and driving sustained downward pressure on wholesale prices.
For the first time, renewables and large-scale batteries supplied more than half of electricity in the National Electricity Market, lowering coal’s and gas’s shares to historically low levels.
Grid expansion remains a key challenge, with about 6,000 km of new transmission lines needed and real-terms cost escalations up to 100%, underscoring the logistical and fiscal hurdles of higher renewables penetration.
Experts note rooftop solar and high hydro storage help contain prices, but firm, dispatchable capacity is still essential to meet peak demand on hot, windless days.
The mining sector is positioned to benefit from higher renewables through demand for critical minerals and potential green hydrogen, alongside regional development in rural areas.
The National Climate Risk Assessment projects more intense hazards, increasing pressure on critical infrastructure like power lines and communications.
Projects moving from concept to operation are expected to bolster investor confidence and advance a cleaner, smarter, and more secure NEM, with renewables complemented by flexible gas generation and storage.
Storage and distributed energy resources—grid-scale batteries, pumped hydro, rooftop solar, and EV charging—are expanding to support grid stability and price arbitrage.
The government targets a 62%–70% reduction in emissions from 2005 levels by 2035, emphasizing renewable energy and low-emissions manufacturing while expansion of AI and data centers adds demand pressures.
Summary based on 4 sources
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Sources

ABC News • Jan 28, 2026
Australia hits power demand record as renewables pass 50pc milestone
The Sydney Morning Herald • Jan 28, 2026
‘Landmark moment’: Renewables’ record surge sends power prices tumbling
Discovery Alert • Jan 29, 2026
Renewables Supply Majority of NEM Power - 52.4% Milestone