Source: GasNZ
Gas supply concerns have made some existing customers who rely on gas for heating and cooking nervous about gas’s availability in the future, according to Jeffrey Clarke, chief executive of GasNZ.
He says, however, that both industry and government modelling confirm that as New Zealand moves to net-zero emissions, a variety of energy gases will remain available, including new low-emission renewable gas options.
“The choice to warm our homes, heat our water, and cook on gas will remain an option for a long time.”
It is also important to distinguish between natural gas and LPG, he says.
LPG is used by around 300,000 customers throughout New Zealand, and is the only gas available in the South Island.
There is no shortage of LPG, Clarke says.
While natural gas – available only in the North Island and delivered through piped connections – has seen tighter supply this winter, LPG, on the other hand, is versatile, abundant and easy to import if needed.
As well as being the preferred energy source for many households, it can replace or supplement natural gas in many commercial applications.
Household and small consumer natural gas use takes up only a tiny fraction, about five percent, of New Zealand’s available supply of natural gas, he says.
“The recent supply concerns have been more about the availability of natural gas for the big industrial users, like manufacturing and electricity generation, not for households and small businesses.”
And as New Zealand’s energy system changes and decarbonises over coming decades, our choices of energy available will change and grow, he says.
“It is hard to predict what those changes will be, but for residential and small business users who want to keep enjoying gas (natural gas, LPG, and the low-net emissions renewable gas versions that are coming), supply of the small volumes needed is unlikely to be a problem.”
This winter has highlighted the essential role natural gas plays in keeping the lights on, Clarke says.
“While New Zealand proudly generates around 85 percent of its electricity from renewable sources – wind, hydro, solar and geothermal – their variability means they also need backup electricity generation, for when the lakes are low, the wind doesn’t blow, or the sun doesn’t shine.
“Natural gas-powered electricity generation is currently the key source of this instant backup power – especially when the hydro lakes are low.
“Typically, this natural gas electricity generation provides around 10 percent of New Zealand’s electricity.”
New Zealand will need natural gas for electricity generation for a while yet, he says.
“As we increase our reliance on renewable electricity to decarbonise the economy, our need for backup and fast-start generation will also grow.
“Over time, the mix of that generation will change, but for now those critical back-up electricity generators are fired by natural gas, and we can’t do without them.
“Government and industry modelling shows that natural gas will continue to be used in New Zealand up to the time we achieve net-zero emissions in 2050 and beyond.”
But moving towards 2050, renewable gases will play a growing role in decarbonising New Zealand’s energy landscape, he says.
Renewable gases, like the biomethane already being developed from Auckland’s food waste by Ecogas, will soon enter our natural gas pipelines as very low, or net-zero emissions, energy sources.
“There is significant, untapped scope to grow net-zero renewable gas from landfills, water treatment, and agricultural waste in New Zealand, as has already been done for decades in many countries.”
He says similar developments are under way around the world, producing low or net zero-emissions renewable liquid gases – which can be used as direct substitutes for LPG.
“Hydrogen gas is now being used in New Zealand to replace diesel in heavy transport. Together these developments will transform gas energy in New Zealand,” Clarke says.