| Australia’s biggest battery project is about to get a lot bigger, and will be first to 1 GW and 5 GWh 
 
  
 Giles Parkinson
 
 Oct 14, 2025
 
 Battery
 Storage
 
 The biggest battery storage project under development in Australia –   the Supernode facility in the outskirts of Brisbane – is about to get   even bigger, and is likely to be the first to reach 1 gigawatt (GW) and 5   gigawatt hours (GWh) in capacity.
 
 The first 260 megawatt (MW) stage of the Supernode project   was energised late last month,   and the owner Quinbrook Infrastructure has contracts locked in with   Origin Energy and Stanwell Corp for a total of 760 MW and 3,070 MWh, a   mix of two and four-hour configurations.
 
 Quinbrook is now  expecting to add a fourth stage with an eight-hour  configuration,  likely sized at 250 MW and 2,000 MWh that will take its  total capacity  to more than 1 GW, 5 GWh – more than 10 times the  capacity of the  original Tesla big battery at Hornsdale, and nearly 40  times its  storage.
 
 Newly appointed global CEO Brian Restall says  battery storage –  including when linked with large scale solar projects  – remains a  compelling technology because of the improvements in  efficiency and  density, and despite the recent jump in lithium ion  prices.
 
 Quinbrook is using CATL batteries for the Supernode  project and will  be introducing a new version of its big battery  product in the  eight-hour project addition.
 
 In an interview  with Renew Economy, Restall says there are economies of scale, and  economies from the way the battery is used.
 
 “It’s very slow  to charge and discharge. It takes twice as long as  four-hour battery,  but that four-hour battery needs cooling systems and  the eight hour  battery, because you charge and discharge slowly, you’re  not actually  heating the cell chemistry up as much.
 
 “That means that you  don’t need the chiller system like you do with  the faster batteries.  And that means that you don’t have as much  parasitic load. It can cool  with ambient air temperature. That’s  (saving) 3% parasitic load every  day. It’s a big deal.
 
 “It means that instead of the air  conditioning unit that you need in  other units, you can actually fit  more batteries, so you get more energy  density, and because you’re  charging and discharging slower, you get a  longer warranty from the  equipment supply. So all of those things add up  to making it really  cost effective.”
 
 Restall, like others, believes solar and  battery hybrids are reaching  a “tipping point” in terms of being a  firmed energy supply, as  indicated by their recent success in the  latest generation tender under  the federal government’s Capacity  Investment Scheme.
 
 He says the Supernode battery will be  mostly focused on meeting  bespoke contracts with Origin and Stanwell,  and well position to soak up  rooftop solar that is pushing the state’s  minimum demand to ever lower  levles.
 
 But the says it is the  combination of solar and batteries that will  make the difference – it  underpins their planned polysilicon export  factory in the new Landsdown  eco-industrial zone near Townsville, and  other projects it is planning  in NSW and Queensland.
 
 Combining a solar plant and a big  battery can deliver 16 hours of  firmed energy each day – perfect for a  manufacturing facility running  two shift a day.
 
 “You’ve got  eight hours of sun. So for eight hours of sunshine, you  export one  megawatt, you charge the battery fate for one megawatt, and  then you  dispatch when it’s not sunny,” he says.
 
 “That makes it the  lowest cost marginal megawatt that we can we think  of now, that  combination beats onshore wind, it definitely beats  offshore wind. And,  you know, it is the lowest cost marginal megawatt  that combination.”
 
 Restall says Quinbrook is not fazed by the new energy roadmap   released by the Queensland state government, saying the minister is   right to focus on affordability and planning issues. “It is very   consistent with our with our own investment mandate,” he says.
 
 See also:   Australia’s 10 biggest battery storage projects – and what they are paid to do
 
 And:   Big Battery Storage Map of Australia
 
 reneweconomy.com.au
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