| Australia’s most powerful battery injects full capacity into grid for first time as it nears commissioning 
 
   Waratah Super Battery. Image: Akaysha Energy.
 
 Giles Parkinson
 
 Oct 11, 2025
 
 Battery
 Storage
 
 Australia’s most powerful battery has injected its full 850 megawatt   (MW) capacity into the grid for the first time as it nears full   commissioning and another step change in the way the electricity grid is   managed.
 
 The Waratah Super Battery is rated at 850 MW and 1680 MWh.
 
 It is not the biggest battery by storage capacity – that title is   held for the moment by Neoen’s 2,240 MWh Collie battery in Western   Australia.
 
 But it is the biggest battery by capacity, and in fact the biggest of any type of machine to appear on Australia’s grid.
 
 At 8.30am on Friday morning, Waratah injected its full capacity of   850 MW as it conducted its last “hold point” testing, and then also   charged at a rate of 844 MW in the early afternoon. See graph below   sourced from Open Electricity.
 
 
   
 To  give an idea of how much bigger Waratah is than any other battery  in  NSW, that 850 MW discharge was more than any combined discharge of  all  the other eight fully operating batteries in the state.
 
 The  Waratah battery, built at the site of the shuttered Munmorah coal  plant  on the central coast of NSW, is designed principally to act as a  giant  “shock absorber” – but its presence points to the fundamental  changes  on a grid that is now focused on maximum flexibility and dealing  with  increased complexity.
 
 That primary role as “shock absorber”  will allow the main  transmission lines feeding into the state’s biggest  load centres –  Sydney, Newcastle and Wollongong – to run at much  higher capacity.  Waratah will be on standby ready to react in an  instant should there be a  fault or disturbance.
 
 To add to  the complexity, the “shock absorber” contract for Waratah  is linked  with three other facilities – the Metz solar farm, the  Sapphire wind  farm, and the Tumut pumped hydro generator that will also  respond  should Waratah be needed to step in.
 
 The contract is also  sculpted, meaning that at times Waratah needs to  make available 700 MW  and 1,400 MWh of capacity, and less capacity at  other times. It will  trade the rest of the battery’s capacity on the  open market.
 
 But the sheer scale of Waratah’s power – and its speed of response –   may also offer some reassurance to the Australian Energy Market Operator   should it need to deal with lack of reserve conditions, or the sudden   loss of a major generation unit, which is a constant worry in the  summer  heat.
 
 Waratah is the most powerful of nearly 50 big  batteries that are  operating or working their way through their  commissioning process in  Australia.
 
 It’s not just new  technologies entering the market, it is also new  market players.  Waratah’s owner, Akaysha Energy, literally came from  nowhere to win  that contract and is now also commissioning the smaller  Brendale and  Ulinda Park batteries in Queensland, and building the 415  MW, 1660 MWh  Orana battery in NSW.
 
 It has also been announced as a winner  of underwriting agreements  under the Capacity Investment Scheme for a  new battery in Victoria, Deer  Park, and an extension of the Ulinda Park  battery.
 
 See also Renew Economy’s   Big Battery Storage Map of Australia for more information
 
 reneweconomy.com.au
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