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Home Asset Management

SA tenants join Australia’s largest Virtual Power Plant

by Eliza Booth
September 10, 2020
in Asset Management, Environment, News, Smart Cities, Spotlight
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Social housing tenants in South Australia will soon benefit from lower energy bills and a more resilient grid with the help of new residential batteries and rooftop solar systems as part of Australia’s largest virtual power plant (VPP).

On behalf of the Federal Government, the Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA) has announced $8.2 million in funding to Tesla Motors Australia (Tesla) to deploy residential battery and rooftop solar systems at 3,000 properties owned by Housing SA across Adelaide.

As part of the South Australian Virtual Power Plant (SA VPP), Tesla will install 5kW of rooftop solar and a 13.5kWh Powerwall battery system at each property, at no cost to the tenant. The system will provide approximately 80 per cent of average household energy use.

Together with the 1,100 systems already installed in a previous phase, the combined 20MW/54MWh of residential energy storage will be used by Tesla in a centrally-controlled VPP trial.

Housing SA tenants, like other renters, are usually locked out of being able to benefit from renewable energy. The tenants involved in the trial will benefit from cheaper household electricity bills, with the project offering electricity rates 22 per cent lower than the default market offer.

A VPP is a centrally-managed network of battery systems installed behind-the-meter that can be collectively controlled to deliver benefits to households, energy retailers and the local network.

The $60.6 million SA VPP is also supported by $10 million from the South Australian Government’s Grid Scale Storage Fund in ongoing payments, $30 million debt finance from the Clean Energy Finance Corporation and an $18 million equity contribution from Tesla.

With the support of the SA Government, Tesla has previously installed 1,100 solar and battery systems. This next phase of deployment supports Tesla’s ambition to create the world’s largest VPP comprising 50,000 solar and storage systems across both social housing and private dwellings.

The 3,000 additional systems will also participate in AEMO’s VPP trial to provide a range of grid stability services by exporting excess energy to the National Electricity Market.

Previously, ARENA has supported VPP projects in South Australia led by AGL and Simply Energy.

ARENA CEO, Darren Miller, said this was the next step towards the commercialisation of VPPs.

“This project represents a significant step towards a technology and commercial model for battery and solar that requires no upfront cost or risk to the customer. Another benefit of this approach is that it is open to households that otherwise wouldn’t have access to renewable energy options,” Mr Miller said.

With more than 2.5 million households already owning rooftop solar and more than 60,000 home battery storage systems already installed in Australia, Mr Miller said VPPs would be important to Australia’s future energy security and reliability.

“As rooftop solar and home battery storage increases in Australia in the coming decades, virtual power plants potentially have an important role to play in harnessing distributed energy in a way that maximises the benefit to the customer as well as the electricity system as a whole,” Mr Miller said.

“By supporting this pioneering project, ARENA is excited to help support the evolution of virtual power plants that can provide dispatchable power and essential grid stability, powered by clean energy technology, at scale.”

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