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We actually DO know what the medium term end product will be.As I say, it will be self resolving. If it works that will be great, if it doesn't work it will be fixed.
Australians wont accept a 3rd world electrical supply, what you or I say will be the finished product doesn't matter at all, neither of us actually know what the end product will be.
It's a bit like the NBN, I went to get it connected this week and it was much better and cheaper to get 5G wireless instead, it is much faster and $10 cheaper. Lol
I have had an optical cable to the property since it was first rolled out over 10 years ago, but I never connected to it, now I can get a cheaper and faster connection without having a hole in the wall and a box bolted inside the house.
So now tenants can take the internet with them. Lol who would have thought that would happen, when they were arguing about the NBN 15 years ago.
And nothing in the energy industry is self resolving unless, using your logic, everything resolves. Resolution requires action in keeping with industry acceptance of the inevitable, and clearing the policy and implementation pathway for it.
That writing has been on the wall for over a decade, and with BESS in particular right now getting ridiculously cheaper each year we are heading there faster than all planners thought.
There is also a lot of gnorance, at least at the lay level, about how good the transition will eventually turn out. One of those elements relates to inertia, and it's well and truly a non-issue with renewables, providing the transitional grid infrastrure is properly planned. The other aspect the general population gets concerned about is baseload, because that's what we've been told is missing with RE. However the world has move on, and energy systems are now more concerned about managing the ever changing flexible supply paradigm. Within it the grid actually becomes more reliable overall, and GW-scale generator outages will no longer pose a problem.
Borrowing from here, we can see where we were, where are now, and where we will be in the 2030s:
I won't get into debates about electricity costs as in the RE+storage environment generator costs will keep reducing, while the same cannot be said for FF-based energy. There's also capacity, with proper planning, to significantly reduce transmission costs by scaling RE projects to meet more localised demand.