| NSW gives planning approval for giant 2 GWh battery at site of state’s likely last coal generator 
 
   The proposed Hallett battery in South Australia
 Image Credit: EnergyAustralia
 
 Giles Parkinson & Joshua S Hill
 
 Nov 26, 2024
 
 1
 
 Battery
 Storage
 
 
 The New South Wales government says it has given approval for a giant   battery project at Mt Piper, near Lithgow, at the site of what could   well be the last coal fired power station to close in the state.
 
 The plan for a 500 megawatt (MW), 2,000 megawatt hour (MWh) is being   proposed by Mt Piper owner EnergyAustralia, one of a number of storage   projects in its development portfolio, including the neighbouring Lake   Lyell pumped hydro project.
 
 EnergyAustralia hopes to begin  construction of the big battery in  2026, and it will follow other coal  plant owners in NSW – including  AGL’s Liddell facility and Origin’s  Eraring facility – in building  massive batteries at the site of  shuttered or soon to be closed coal  fired power generators.
 
 The state is also building the 850 MW, 1680 MWh Waratah Super Battery   at the site of the shuttered Munmorah coal fired generator on the   central coast, while two different battery projects have been proposed   for the site of the shuttered Wallerawang coal generator near Lithgow.
 
 EnergyAustralia estimates that the battery project will inject  around  $1 billion into the NSW economy, and employ 177 people in the   construction phase.
 
 “With a $1 billion price tag, this battery is among the biggest in Australia,”   said Paul Scully, NSW’s minister for planning and public spaces.
 
 “It stands ready to inject major capital investment, create jobs and   provide Lithgow Council with $2 million to invest in local community   projects.
 
 “Large-scale batteries are crucial for our state’s  energy future.  They help store renewable energy, making sure that we  have a reliable  power supply even when the sun isn’t shining, or the  wind isn’t blowing.
 
 “This project not only supports our  transition to cleaner energy but  it also strengthens our energy  security and resilience. Investing in  these batteries means a more  sustainable and dependable energy system  for everyone.”
 
 The  Mt Piper coal fired power generator is currently due to close in  2040,  making it the last one standing in what remains the country’s  biggest  coal grid.
 
 But most market analysts believe it will close  well before that,  although that also depends on the pace of new wind  and solar capacity,  and market conditions at the time. The Eraring,  Vales Point and  Bayswater coal generators are due to all close over the  next nine years.
 
 EnergyAustralia is hoping to build or  contract around 3GW of new wind  and solar capacity but is committing  most of its energy to building new  storage projects, including the  Wooreen battery in the Latrobe Valley,  near its Jeeralang gas plant,  and the Hallett battery in South  Australia, next to an existing gas  plant.
 
 The Wooreen project is currently slated to be sized at  350MW with  four hours storage, while Hallett will initially measure in  at  50MW/200MWh, with plans to triple its capacity to 150MW/600MWh down  the  track.
 
 Both have won underwriting agreements with the  federal government  under a pilot tender of the Capacity Investment  Scheme, and it is likely  that the Mt Piper battery will also be  submitted in current and future  tenders.
 
 reneweconomy.com.au
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