Giant Brisbane battery trebles in size after Origin extends deal for life beyond baseload  
 
  
   Image supplied     Giles Parkinson
  Jul 11, 2024
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   Battery   Storage
     The already giant Supernode battery project in the north of Brisbane  is to treble in size after the developer Quinbrook Infrastructure  Partners extended its off-take deal with Australia’s biggest utility,  Origin Energy.
      The first stage of the battery – sized at 250 MW and 520 MWh –  is already under construction after the two companies announced an off take agreement earlier this year.
      That partnership has deepened with Origin now signing for a major  extension – this time a four hour facility sized at 250 MW and 1040 MWh.  The extension will double the connection capacity of the battery to 500  MW, but triple its overall storage capacity to 1560 MWh, making it one  of the biggest in the country.
       Origin has signed up for all of the capacity for both the first and  second stage of the project, a significant move as it ramps up its  battery storage portfolio as it prepares to shutter the Eraring coal  fired generator in NSW between 2027 and 2029, and moves f rom a reliance on “baseload” capacity to flexible capacity.
      “The Supernode offtake will be an important addition to our growing  storage portfolio, and reflects our belief that storage will play an  important role in helping firm variable renewable energy supply and  maintaining secure, reliable energy supply for customers,” Origin’s head  of markets Greg Jarvis said in a statement.
      Origin Energy has already made it abundantly clear that it sees no  future for “baseload” power generators in a grid that will be dominated  by variable wind and solar, with the gaps to be filled by a combination  of battery storage, pumped hydro or other long duration storage, and  fast-start generators that will be fuelled by gas or green hydrogen.
      It is currently building a 460 MW, 920 MWh battery at Eraring, the  first stage of what could be a 2,800 MWh project, and has revealed plans  to build  a 300 MW/650 MWH battery next to its Mortlake gas generator in Victoria and a 500 MW, 2000 MWh battery next to its Darling Downs gas generator at Dalby in Queensland.
      It’s also a big coup for Quinbrook, which has focused on  international markets but is now heading the Australian component of the  massive Sun Cable project in the Northern Territory, and also has plans  for a multi-billion dollar silicon production hub in Queensland to help  secure part of the solar supply chain in Australia.
      “Origin’s commitment to both Stages 1 and 2 speaks volumes to how  strategically located the Supernode site is within the Queensland power  system,” said David Scaysbrook, the co-founder and managing partner of  Quinbrook Infrastructure Partners.? 
       “The South Pine switchyard is the central node of the electricity  network in Queensland, with an estimated 80% of Queensland’s traded  electricity flowing through here every day. It’s hard to imagine a more  ideal location for storage in the sunshine state,” he said.
      Quinbrook says its Supernode site – so called because it hopes to  also be a data centre – is the last non-flood prone land adjacent to the  South Pine central node, and its proximity helps mitigate marginal loss  factor and curtailment risk. It has a potential connection capacity of  750 MW, the company said last year.
      “This is recognized by many in the industry as Queensland’s best  site for a big battery, and we are pleased to be partnering with Origin  in delivering several innovations in how we are integrating the key  elements of this important storage project,” Quinbrook co-founder Brian  Restall said.
      Quinbrook says the rapidly changing market dynamics created by the  accelerating transition to green energy is creating immediate and  substantial opportunities for battery storage technology. 
      It says the Supernode battery will be able to respond to market  signals within milliseconds, and can earn revenue arbitraging spot  market prices, selling cap contracts, or participating in frequency  control ancillary services (FCAS) markets. 
      It notes that battery storate technology is also increasingly being  called upon by network service providers to deliver vital grid support  functions in exchange for payments under long-term bi-lateral contracts.  
      Around 10,000 MW of battery capacity, with varying levels of storage,  is expected to be built in the state in the coming decade, as it seeks  to reach its target of 85 per cent renewables by 2035.
      See also Renew Economy’s  Big Battery Storage Map of Australia for more information.
      Note: This story has been updated to correct the battery supplier for the project.
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