Energy March 2021

Page 10

NEWS

WORLD’S BIGGEST BATTERY

BOUND FOR NSW

C

EP.Energy is set to build the largest proposed gridscale battery in the world, under a new 30-year lease agreement with the Hunter Investment Corporation. The proposed battery will have up to 1,200MW total capacity and will be based within the Hunter Economic Zone (HEZ) precinct at Kurri Kurri. The NSW battery would be the largest asset in CEP’s planned network of four grid-scale batteries across the country, with total capacity up to 2000MW. Peter Wright, CEO of CEP, said the business is on track to become the largest battery storage asset owner in the Australian energy market. “CEP’s grid-scale battery network is part of our dual-track strategy to generate and store clean, reliable and cost-effective electricity for Australian businesses, and make excess power available to the national grid to firm up the increase in renewable generation,” Mr Wright said. “To achieve this, we have secured strategic locations with excellent access to existing network connection infrastructure. “We have also assembled a senior management team with outstanding credentials in national energy system design and management. “The HEZ site is zoned for heavy industrial use, pre-approved for power generation and located adjacent to existing substations. “It is among the best handful of sites in Australia for reliable and efficient grid connection.” Mr Wright said the Hunter battery is proposed to be developed in stages. An expression of interest process to select a battery provider will soon be issued. Commencement of construction of CEP’s NSW big battery is planned for the first quarter of 2022, while the target timeframe for commencement of operations is 2023. Morris Iemma, Chairman of CEP, said integrated grid-scale battery networks are accelerating Australia’s transition to a clean energy future.

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March 2021 ISSUE 13

“Big batteries, including the one planned by CEP for the Hunter, will play a major role in filling the gaps left by the gradual retirement of coal and gas-fired generation assets, including the nearby Liddell Power Station,” Mr Iemma said. “The clean energy roadmap laid out by the NSW Government has provided the market with the confidence to invest in renewable generation supported by large battery storage. “This project will help ensure the Hunter region of NSW remains true to its heritage as one of the nation’s energy powerhouses as we work towards a cleaner, decarbonised future.” The Energy Security Board Post 2025 Market Design Directions Paper, released in January 2021, states: Over the next two decades 26-50GW of new, large-scale variable renewable energy – in addition to existing, committed and anticipated projects – is forecast to come online This will be supported by between 6GW and 19GW of new flexible and dispatchable resources as approximately 16GW of thermal generation retires

Mark Stedwell, CEP’s Chief Strategy Advisor and previously GM Real Time Operations and Systems Capability at the Australian Energy Market Operator, said, “Reliable battery storage will provide contingency supply to enable greater levels of variable renewable generation to penetrate the Australian energy market moving forward. “There is clearly scope for more big battery projects that stack up in terms of location and a sustainable business model.” CEP’s grid-scale battery network will be progressed concurrently with its development of an aggregated Virtual Power Plant (VPP) comprising 1,500MW of industrial rooftop solar generation supported by up to 400MW of battery storage over the next five years. The rooftop VPP strategy is aimed at stimulating new jobs and economic activity in major manufacturing and commercial hubs in Australia by reducing operating costs for energy-intensive businesses.

www.energymagazine.com.au


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Articles inside

Virtual PPAs: the future for energy trading

4min
pages 62-65

Gone with the wind: how wind power has affected electricity prices and volatility

6min
pages 58-61

Time is running out to salvage Australia’s EV future

5min
pages 56-57

Sowing the seeds to reap smart meter rewards

6min
pages 54-55

Highs and lows: Western Australia’s ten-year gas outlook

7min
pages 50-53

Connecting the dots: bringing gas to market

5min
pages 46-49

Dousing the flame: why natural gas isn’t the economy-saving solution Australia needs

9min
pages 42-45

Mobile contact voltage solution quickly identifies hazardous condition in schoolyard

2min
pages 40-41

Managing communications on a remote site

2min
pages 38-39

Powering Australia’s hydrogen future

9min
pages 32-35

Why hydrogen is the better battery

7min
pages 36-37

Five ways Australia’s energy technology will change in the next decade

5min
pages 24-25

The first step before you build solar or wind

3min
pages 26-27

Boost your solar output by 30 per cent

4min
pages 28-29

The future of solar battery technology

2min
pages 30-31

Where is bioenergy in the renewable energy conversation?

2min
pages 22-23

WA trials broaden horizon for microgrids

4min
pages 16-17

Cloud computing: renewable forecasting by predicting cloud behaviour

8min
pages 18-21

Economics prove renewables are the future of energy generation

8min
pages 12-15

World’s biggest battery bound for NSW

2min
page 10

New leadership at AEMO

2min
page 8

AGL reveals big battery project suppliers

2min
page 6

Mega energy class action against QLD generators

2min
page 11

Electricity prices to drop, report says

2min
page 9
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Energy March 2021 by Monkey Media - Issuu