Skip to content
Energy, General News

New roadmap for grid stability in Australia’s shift to renewables

UNSW Sydney 3 mins read

As Australia moves to a renewable electricity supply, the foundations of power system security are being challenged and transformed. Coal-fired generators are retiring, new technologies are scaling rapidly, and decades-old rules and assumptions are being tested in real time.

A new White Paper, Securing Power Systems in the Renewable Revolution (available here – media access only) sets out a clear roadmap for navigating the next phase of the transition. Released by the NSW Decarbonisation Innovation Hub’s Electrification and Energy Systems Network, UNSW Energy Institute and the University of Wollongong, the paper examines what a high-renewables future means for grid security.

Australia’s energy transition is not a leap into the dark. Renewable penetration has already reached 70-80% at times, without compromising system security. Nationally, there are more than 4.3 million rooftop solar connections, alongside a rapidly growing battery ecosystem. But operating a highly renewable grid at scale, across seasons and under extreme conditions introduces new uncertainties.

The White Paper identifies the critical technical, regulatory and economic issues that must be addressed to ensure grid security. It aims to help the sector navigate one of the most critical technical, policy and economic challenges of the energy transition: keeping the lights on while transforming the grid for a fully renewable future.

“We’re moving from a system governed by physical properties to one controlled by software and power electronics,” said UNSW Energy Institute Industry Professor of Practice Mark Twidell, a White Paper co-author. “That’s effectively an analogue-to-digital transformation of the network.”

The system increasingly relies on inverters to convert renewable energy into grid-ready power. They are fast and flexible but respond differently from traditional generators during disruptions.

“The main risk isn’t normal day-to-day operation,” Mark said. “It’s how inverters respond during faults and disturbances, and whether existing protection systems can continue to operate reliably when those responses change.

“The White Paper calls for closer industry collaboration to harness existing data to understand inverter behaviour and plan ahead.”

A key concern is maintaining the grid’s ‘heartbeat’, the steady frequency that keeps electricity stable, without traditional generators.

“At some point we have to ask whether we’re still connecting new things to a legacy grid, or whether the new things are the grid,” said co-author Ty Christopher, Director of the Energy Futures Network at the University of Wollongong.

“We’re trying to manage a 21st-century grid with 20th-century regulation,” he said. “Those rules were written for a system that simply no longer exists.”

The White Paper sets out a national approach to electrification built on partnerships between industry, academia and government. It seeks to address the immediate, high-stakes challenges, while also establishing a framework to resolve longer-term strategic issues that affect a wide range of stakeholders.

Its ultimate purpose is to provide a shared evidence base and clear priorities for those shaping the energy transformation.

Dani Alexander, interim CEO of the NSW Decarbonisation Innovation Hub and CEO of the UNSW Energy Institute said the White Paper comes at a critical moment.

“With the Australian Energy Market Operator last year highlighting emerging risks to system security, we need to quickly answer the unresolved questions in this paper to support the rapid rollout of renewables,” she said.

“With early investment and a national approach, I strongly believe that our homegrown ingenuity can solve these challenges to secure our energy future.”

 

White Paper authors: Mark Twidell, John Fletcher, Georgios Konstantinou, Felipe Arraño-Vargas, Ty Christopher, Mark Lewis and Dani Alexander.

 

Join industry experts for a webinar Thursday 19th February 12PM AEDT to dive deeper into the report’s findings and explore the future of Australia’s renewable grid.

The report is available for public download.

 

Available for interview:

Mark Twidell, Industry Professor of Practice, UNSW Energy Institute m.twidell@unsw.edu.au

Ty Christopher, Director, Energy Futures Network, University of Wollongong tchristo@uow.edu.au

 


Contact details:

For more information please contact:

NSW Decarb Hub: Fiona Russell, +61 412 720 640 or communications@decarbhub.au

UNSW: Ashleigh Steele, +61 421 208 805 or ashleigh.steele@unsw.edu.au

Media

More from this category

  • General News
  • 14/02/2026
  • 00:10
Meltwater

Meltwater Earns Official Data Partner Status with Reddit

SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 13, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Meltwater, a global leader in media, social, and consumer intelligence, today announced it has joined Reddit’s Official Data Partner program, a selective designation recognizing industry-leading platforms that help businesses do more with Reddit’s publicly available content. Partners must meet Reddit’s rigorous standards for functionality, data quality, and compliance.This partnership continues Meltwater’s access to Reddit's enterprise data APIs, allowing customers to unlock insights and signals from authentic sentiment from Reddit that shape consumer culture, preferences, and purchasing decisions, providing more accurate, real-time insights of aggregated consumer intent. Additionally, Meltwater gains the opportunity to…

  • Community, General News
  • 13/02/2026
  • 10:59
House of Representatives

Submissions reopened for inquiry into link between domestic, family and sexual violence and suicide

TheHouse of RepresentativesStanding Committee on Social Policy and Legal Affairshas reopened submissions untilFriday, 13 March 2026for itsinquiryinto the relationship between domestic, family and sexual violence (DFSV) and suicide. Chair of the Committee,Ms Louise Miller-Frost MP, said “the Committee wants to ensure that the community and the sector have ample opportunity to contribute to this inquiry and can provide the Committee with a deeper understanding of these issues and how more accurate DFSV data and trends can be obtained.” Ms Miller-Frost noted that “due to the high level of interest received to date, the Committee has agreed to reopen submissions for…

  • General News
  • 13/02/2026
  • 08:25
Mohawk Industries, Inc.

Mohawk Industries Reports Q4 2025 Results

CALHOUN, Ga., Feb. 12, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Mohawk Industries, Inc. (NYSE: MHK) today announced fourth quarter 2025 net earnings of $42 million and earnings per share (“EPS”) of $0.68; adjusted net earnings were $124 million, and adjusted EPS was $2.00. Net sales for the fourth quarter of 2025 were $2.7 billion, up 2.4% as reported and down 3.3% on an adjusted basis versus the prior year. During the fourth quarter of 2024, the Company reported net sales of $2.6 billion, net earnings of $90 million and earnings per share of $1.43; adjusted net earnings were $123 million, and adjusted…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.