| Australia’s clean energy pipeline grows 24% to 56.6 GW 
 The   Australian Energy Market Operator (AEMO) reported a 24% rise in new   generation and storage capacity across the National Electricity Market   (NEM), reaching 56.6 GW, as grid-scale batteries and hybrid solar   projects drive growth.
 
 October 28, 2025                                                Brian Publicover
 
 
   Image: AEMO
 
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 AEMO’s latest “Connections   Scorecard” shows a growing wave of new generation and storage projects   across the NEM, with the development pipeline now reaching 56.6 GW of   new capacity — a 24% increase over the past year.
 
 Each quarter,  AEMO tracks the  progress of new projects as they move through the  connection process,  from initial application to full output.
 
 AEMO Onboarding and Connections  Group Manager Margarida Pimentel said  the expanding pipeline reflects  strong momentum across governments and  industry to deliver new energy  capacity and support a reliable power  system.
 
 “The latest insights show a strong  and growing pipeline  of new energy projects entering the market to meet  consumers’ growing  electricity needs,” Pimentel said. “During the three  months to  September, six projects totaling 1.6 GW completed full output,  while a  further 2.4 GW of staged capacity has been released from  projects  working towards full output.
 
 Pimentel noted that in the last 12   months, 28 projects (4.7 GW) have been commissioned. These include the   Golden Plains Wind Farm (733 MW), Aldoga Solar Farm (387 MW), Stubbo   Solar Farm 1 (202 MW), Ulinda Park Battery Energy Storage System (155 MW   / 298 MWh), Mannum Battery Energy Storage System (100 MW / 200 MWh)  and  Tallawarra A upgrade (29 MW).
 
 “Ten projects (2.2 GW) were   registered, increasing the total number of projects working to   commission to 25 (7 GW). A further 23.2 GW of earlier-stage projects are   finalizing contracts or under construction — up 43% from this time  last  year,” said Pimentel.
 
 The total connections pipeline now   includes 275 projects representing 56.6 GW in generation and storage   capacity – equivalent to about 82% of the NEM’s existing generation   capacity.
 
 “The pipeline showcases the  National Electricity  Market’s shift from a baseload and peaking power  system to one that’s  built on renewables and firming,” Pimentel said.  “Grid-scale batteries  make up about half of all new capacity in the  investment pipeline,  increasing 79% year-on-year from 14.6 GW to 26.1  GW. Of this, around  70% (18.2 GW) are grid-forming batteries,  highlighting the rapid  technological progress underway across  Australia.”
 
 Hybrid solar  and storage projects  have expanded to 9.4 GW, making up 17% of the  total connections pipeline  – a 7% increase from a year earlier.
 
 The scorecard also shows that  projects are taking longer in the  proponent implementation phase,  between application approval and  registration.
 
 “We’re seeing some projects taking  longer in the  proponent implementation phase, due to prolonged funding  uncertainty,  project ownership changes, and design modifications, such  as battery  integration and original equipment manufacturer changes,”  said  Pimentel.
 
 pv-magazine-australia.com
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