Maximum demand is an ass. Lets say you have a house. I had a 32A cooker circuit, a 32A RF and a 6A lighting circuit (lets say 10 fittings) That gives you a maximum demand of 51.5A (IIRC) Now you go in and rewire it.
AEMO has produced electricity demand forecasts for the National Electricity Market (NEM) since 2012Prior to that, forecasts were provided by the Transmission Network Service Providers for each NEM region and published as part of the NEM Electricity Statement of Opportunities (ESOO).From 2012 to 2016, AEMO published its demand forecasts as the National Electricity Forecasting Report (NEFR). These forecasts can be found on the page.In 2017, AEMO published its demand forecasts as the. These forecasts were updated in March 2018.For the, updated demand forecasts were produced and published as part of that document. In 2018 and 2019 the demand forecasts were similarly published as part of the.Since 2015, demand forecasts have been uploaded to AEMO’s. Forecasts are provided for operational consumption and maximum demand (and, since 2016, minimum demand). For forecast definitions, see this (166 KB, pdf). The table below lists the most recent electricity demand forecasts and their publication date.
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Publication dateForecast publication nameAugust 2019February 2019(357 KB, pdf)August 2018March 2018August 2017June 2017March 2017(393 KB, pdf)August 2016(2.37 MB, pdf)June 2016(3.56 MB, pdf)In February 2019, AEMO published its Electricity Demand Forecasting Methodology Information Paper (Methodology Paper), which explains the data sources and methodologies used to forecast annual consumption, and maximum and minimum demand in the NEM. Download (2.26 MB, pdf)Forecast accuracy is assessed for the forecasts used in the Electricity Statement of Opportunities. for more information.