Carnegie, Lendlease join forces to target “massive” microgrid market

Australia’s budding – and potentially massive – microgrid market is the focus of a major new deal between two industry powerhouses this week: property and infrastructure group Lendlease Services and leading solar and battery storage engineering company Energy Made Clean, a fully owned subsidiary of ASX-listed Carnegie Clean Energy.

Carnegie – formerly known as Carnegie Wave Energy – said on Monday that EMC had signed a Joint Venture Agreement with Lendlease Services, part of the broader Lendlease Group, to identify, pursue, bid for, secure and deliver EPC contracts for solar and/or battery energy storage systems (BESS) around Australia.

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The initial three-year deal signals the major shift already taking place in Australia’s energy market dynamic and structure, as cheap, clean, reliable and locally generated energy becomes just one more part of the “sustainable living” package expected of new property developments.

Both companies already have considerable skin in the microgrid game, including together, on the community-level battery storage pilot kicked off last year in the northern suburbs of Perth – a sustainable community development at Alkimos Beach that combines 1.1MWh of lithium-ion battery storage with more than 100 rooftop solar homes, and is testing different electricity tariff options and retail models.

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The new JV will work to the two companies’ strengths – including Lendlease’s national footprint across Australia, as well as its experience in the construction and maintenance of power distribution and generation assets.

EMC, which was fully acquired by Carnegie in October, has rapidly become one of Australia’s biggest names in renewable microgrid design and development, having built itself up from an innovative start up to delivering major contracts to local utilities (it is also working with WA’s Synergy for the Alkimos project).

As EMC’s managing director, John Davidson observed in an interview with RenewEconomy on Monday, the company’s journey from small and private, to double the size and listed (via Carnegie), and then partnered with one of the world’s largest property management groups, all in the space of just three months, mirrors the speed at which the market is growing.

“Our customers over the last 18 months have been the defence department, power utilities, water utilities; and the speed at which we have had to move has been frightening. And that’s not going to let up,” Davidson said over the phone from Perth.

“We’ve been really successful in this fast growth industry by creating …strategic alliances, and the successful completion of Alkimos brought us back into view with Lendlease, which fit us perfectly, because they’re very active in remote areas.

“We can now start coming over towards the eastern seaboard (of Australia) and have a presence there, with Lendlease,” he added, noting the two companies had already written a number of joint proposals.

“There is substantial opportunity inside Australia and we now have the tools to really gear up for it,” Davidson said.

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Just last week, Carnegie announced a separate joint venture, in which EMC would collaborate with Japanese company Sumitomo Electric Industries to develop and demonstrate a commercial-scale solar and battery storage plant in Australia, using Sumitomo’s vanadium redox flow (VRF) battery technology.

Carnegie Clean Energy managing director, Michael Ottaviano, said the new deal with Lendlease would give both companies access to a broader range of “blue-chip” microgird clients, including network providers, utilities, large-scale residential developments and defence.

In particular, he said it would significantly boost the already rapid growth of the EMC business, which turned over $16 million in revenues in the 2016 financial year.

“The size of the target market within Australia, across off-grid; fringe-of-grid; commercial and industrial is estimated to be in excess of $1.6 billion over the next five years, and $5 billion over the next 10 years, as the costs of solar and BESS continue to fall and renewable energy penetration continues to grow.

“This partnership will enable us to seize this significant opportunity and cement our position as market leader in this space,” Dr Ottaviano said.

Comments

14 responses to “Carnegie, Lendlease join forces to target “massive” microgrid market”

  1. George Darroch Avatar
    George Darroch

    Lendlease do $15b of property development annually. This is huge.

  2. Ian Avatar
    Ian

    Not a great fan of Lendlease, talk about corporatisation of every aspect of Australian life. There’s hardly any coastal land they haven’t got their greedy hands on. If I were Carnegie Iwould choose a better bedfellow than that lot.

  3. Geoff Avatar
    Geoff

    Lendlease are a bunch of crooks. I would steer clear of them.

    1. jrdbull Avatar
      jrdbull

      Sounds like they are good bed fellows for EMC then.

    2. disqus_gF5uXVTUbL Avatar
      disqus_gF5uXVTUbL

      I did some electrical work for Lendlease on the Brisbane International Airport and found them ok. Although wouldn’t it be better to judge them on the present instead of the past?

      1. Ian Avatar
        Ian

        The past is key to the future, Leopards do not change their spots, once a thief always a thief, cautionary tales, once bitten twice shy. History repeats itself, take due diligence. Our language is full of this sort of wisdom. Nothing wrong with looking at a company’s track record.

        1. disqus_gF5uXVTUbL Avatar
          disqus_gF5uXVTUbL

          No I didn’t think of that sinister plot. I was hoping for straightforward collective ownership by a body corporate or cooperative or something more community based. Not absent shareholders in another country or non-local people having a say in the lives of locals.

          1. Ian Avatar
            Ian

            Your vision, sir, is perfect.

          2. disqus_gF5uXVTUbL Avatar
            disqus_gF5uXVTUbL

            I’m a social worker, they have a little training in policy, org structure and community development. I simply lifted the content from others.

  4. disqus_gF5uXVTUbL Avatar
    disqus_gF5uXVTUbL

    Looking at the other comments, I don’t care who Lendlease have been, this rollout is one of the most significant things happening in the country. It entrenches renewables in buildings, changes social attitudes, will silence conservative politicians and bodgy analysts, and cap or reduce grid cabling sizes. It is the leadership in the country we need. Great journalism.

  5. disqus_gF5uXVTUbL Avatar
    disqus_gF5uXVTUbL

    Despite conservative views to the contrary, solar/storage is obviously going to be a thing for the relatively wealthy, giving them flexibility with their bills and the ability to consume more at lower cost. The same will be true of EV’s with the relatively wealthy being able to drive further and more often.

    1. James Ray Avatar

      The uptake of solar has been high in suburbs that have statistically moderate or even low incomes.

      https://reneweconomy.wpengine.com/rooftop-solar-uptake-still-highest-in-low-income-australia-63263/

      1. disqus_gF5uXVTUbL Avatar
        disqus_gF5uXVTUbL

        Maybe so and the prices of houses, solar systems, batteries and EV’s vary.

  6. James Ray Avatar

    In addition to solar and storage, local electricity trading will also help to make energy supply more economical, all of which will help with microgrids. Read, sign and share this petition to change the national electricity objective (NEO) to consider environmental impact and reconsider the change request to allow Local Generation Network Credits or otherwise facilitate local electricity trading.

    https://secure.avaaz.org/en/petition/The_AEMC_Reconsider_the_change_request_for_local_electricity_trading/edit

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