| Akaysha secures $300 million to accelerate global battery rollout 
 Australian   battery storage developer Akaysha Energy has closed a $300 million   corporate debt facility that will support the expansion of its   large-scale battery project pipeline on a global scale.
 
 September 9, 2025                                               David Carroll
 
   Image: Akaysha Energy
 
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 Akaysha Energy, owned by   United States-based investment giant BlackRock, has raised $300 million   (USD 195.4 million) in debt to advance the development and construction   of its battery energy storage project pipeline in Australia, Japan,  the  United States and Germany.
 
 Andrew Wegman, Chief Financial  and Investment Officer at Akaysha,  said the support will allow the  company to accelerate the delivery of  the large-scale storage needed to  keep energy secure and reliable in  Australia and beyond.
 
 “This  is a landmark facility for Akaysha and for the Australian  renewables  sector,” he said. “It provides the scale and flexibility to  accelerate  our development pipeline and capitalise on near-term  opportunities in  Australian and global energy markets.”
 
 Melbourne-based Akaysha  has a portfolio of 11 battery projects in  Australia, including the 850  MW / 1,680 MWh Waratah Super Battery  nearing completion on the New  South Wales (NSW) Central Coast.
 
 The company recently   brought online the first 350 MW / 750 MWh of the battery’s capacity with full operation expected later this year.
 
 It is also building the 415 MW / 1,660 MWh   Orana battery in central-west NSW and is commissioning the 150 MW / 300 MWh   Ulinda Park and 205 MW / 410 MWh Brendale batteries in Queensland.
 
 Other Queensland projects include the 400 MW / 1,600 MWh Halys and   Wurdong battery energy storage systems, while in Victoria it is pushing   ahead with the same-sized Glenrowan battery and the 300 MW / 1,200 MWh   Elaine project. It is also proposing to build a 100 MW / 200 MWh  battery  near Palmerston in Tasmania.
 
 In South Australia, the  company has plans to develop the 200 MW / 800  MWh Mobilong battery  energy storage system, and a 250 MW / 1,000 MWh  battery and 200 MWp  solar farm near Brinkworth in the state’s mid-north  region.
 
 Akaysha,   acquired by investment giant Blackrock in 2022, also has a portfolio of battery projects in the pipeline in the US, Japan and Germany,
 
 The new funding package, backed by a syndicate of local and   international banks including BNP Paribas, Deutsche Bank, ING, SMBC and   Westpac, consists of a three-year multi-currency revolving loan and a   letter of credit facility.
 
 Akaysha said the facility is the  first borrowing base loan structure  of its kind in the Australian  renewables sector and provides the  flexibility to increase the size of  the loan over time, as the value of  company’s portfolio of battery  assets grows.
 
 “This transaction reflects the growing  sophistication of financing in  the renewable energy sector, introducing  an innovative facility that  will accelerate the rollout of large-scale  battery storage for Akaysha  on a global scale,” Wegman said
 
 pv-magazine-australia.com
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