|   |  Zen Energy breaks ground on its first big battery project  
     Source: Sungrow LinkedIn      Sophie Vorrath
  May 28, 2024  
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     Battery    Storage
      Zen Energy has officially broken ground on its first big battery   project, the 138MW/330MWh Templers BESS being developed near Gawler in   South Australia.
      The groundbreaking ceremony was attended by  key project stakeholders,  including inverter and battery giant Sungrow,  whose PowerTitan  technology is being used for the Templers project.
      Sungrow, with consortium partner Shanxi Electric Power Construction,   says   its “state-of-the-art liquid cooling battery technology” will play a   role in grid reliability, mitigating intermittency issues and   stabilising power supply in the region.
           “This  collaboration marks a significant step towards a sustainable  future. We  are committed to advancing renewable energy initiatives and  look  forward to the successful completion of this project,”   Sungrow said on LinkedIn on Monday.
      The Ross Garnaut-led retailer Zen   announced its plans   to build a grid-scale battery energy storage system (BESS) after  buying  the more than $200 million Templers project from RES Australia  in March  of 2023.
      “We are building our first utility-scale  battery in South Australia,  the state where it all began for Zen,” said  Zen CEO Anthony Garnaut, at  the time.
      The big battery,  located around 60km north of Adelaide, had already  locked in approval  to connect to the grid and Zen had hoped to kick off  construction in  2023 and have the project fully energised by the end of  this year.
       The company plans to use the Templers battery to support the  delivery  of energy to its existing South Australia-based customers, as  well as  for grid-stability services for the wider National Electricity  Market.
      Zen started its journey to supply cheap “basload renewables” to Australian businesses back in late 2017, when it   obtained a licence to retail electricity, with a focus on users with demand of more than 160MWh per annum.
     Since then, the company has mostly achieved this through power   purchase agreements, but branched into renewables development with the   Templers BESS and, more recently, with   ambitious plans to develop a 1GW pumped hydro project on New South Wales coal territory that will supply up to eight hours of “firmed” renewable energy.
       Origin Energy is also considering its own battery project near the   same site – next to the local sub-station – with a 200 MW, 400 MWh   project called Templers Creek.
      See also Renew Economy’s   Big Battery Map of Australia.
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