Ausgrid pitches its first big batteries for Newcastle and Sydney  
   
    Tesla Megapack units at Bouldercombe Battery project. Image: Genex Power     Rachel Williamson
  Nov 4, 2024    2        Battery   Storage
     Network company Ausgrid is planning two big batteries as its first  foray into the world of major energy storage installations, with  proposals in with the New South Wales (NSW) planning department for  projects at Homebush in Sydney and in Newcastle.
      Both battery energy storage systems (BESS) will be sized at 200 megawatt (MW), two hour (400 MWh) systems.
      And both show how useful it is to be an owner operator when it comes  to electricity transmission infrastructure: both will be built on land  already owned by Ausgrid and connect into the company’s own substations  nearby, via new underground cables. 
       In Newcastle the site is the Steel River industrial complex, home to a  data centre, the CSIRO Energy Research Centre, and a major recycling  and processing hub for demolition and other materials.
      In the western Sydney suburb of Homebush, the site is a lot zoned for electricity supply. 
      Ausgrid says the two BESS installations will provide storage and  firming capacity, and frequency control ancillary services (FCAS) for  the grid, and while it’s pushing the concepts through the planning  process, it ultimately wants both to be built and operated by someone  else.
      The company has also already chosen its preferred technology, Tesla’s  lithium iron-phosphate megapacks, according to the scoping reports  issued to the New South Wales (NSW) planning department.
      It anticipates construction on both to start in mid to late 2025. 
      Ausgrid has form with community batteries, installing nine with  federal funding since the program began until August this year. It says  the batteries will push energy prices lower by feeding power into the  grid at peak times. 
       Adding to the battery cluster
   The Steel River BESS in Newcastle won’t be the only one in the area. 
      Just 8km away AGL is considering a four-hour, 500 MW BESS – or a 250  MW gas-fired power station – at Tomago, the home of the Tomago Aluminium  site. 
      To the south is the closed Munmorah coal power station, where the 850  MW / 1,680 MWh Waratah super battery is set to live. Origin is also  building what will be a 2,000 MWh battery at the site of the Eraring  coal generator in the same region.
      And it isn’t the first BESS proposed for the Steel River industrial precinct either. 
      The distribution and transmission line operator wants to put its  battery in the Steel River industrial complex, the same spot as where  Edify Energy and Precinct Capital pitched an energy storage unit in  2020/21.
      But at 200MW, the Ausgrid proposal is significantly bigger than Edify’s 28 MW, two hour battery.
      At the time Newcastle Lord Mayor, Nuatali Nelmes, hoped the  Edify/Precinct Capital idea, which would have been the first of its kind  in the area, might help the city attract more green industries into the  Hunter region.
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