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ARENA backs Qld solar farm that will supply 10% of Australia’s large-scale solar

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A 25MW solar farm being built in the central-western Queensland town of Barcaldine will provide about 10 per cent of Australia’s large-scale solar electricity, according to ARENA, which announced this week it would provide $22.8 million to support the massive project’s construction.

The Barcaldine Regional Community Solar Farm, which once completed will be the state’s largest solar array, was first proposed to the local community in March, by its developers Kingsway Europe and the Australian arm of Elecnor.

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The duo formed a company called Barcaldine Remote Community Solar Farm to plan and develop the project, which is expected to generate 53,000 megawatt hours of renewable energy each year, and may incorporate battery storage once completed in April 2017.

The single-axis tracking solar PV plant will also reduce peak demand pressures and provide voltage control for the local network, resulting in a more robust electricity supply to the sparsely populated and remote Barcaldine region.

ARENA CEO Ivor Frischknecht says the project will demonstrate the benefits renewable generation can deliver when located at the edges of Australia’s sprawling national electricity network.

“Fringe-of-grid locations in regional Australia face a number of challenges with reliability and outages caused by network constraints and a lack of infrastructure,” Frischknecht said.

“This project will serve as a test case showing how the network benefits from distributed renewable energy can improve network efficiency, and potentially enable solar plants to access an extra revenue stream through network support payments.”

Frischknecht said the potential for adding battery storage would also be examined.

“This could allow the solar plant to work in tandem with the existing gas plant during a line outage, operating as an ‘island’ network independent to the main grid,” he said.

“There is a clear value proposition for large-scale solar in the Barcaldine area, which has an excellent solar resource and experiences voltage and frequency control issues as well as load management challenges.”

As well as ARENA’s contribution, the Clean Energy Finance Corporation has provided $20 million in debt finance to the $69 million project.

CEFC CEO Oliver Yates said it was projects like this that showcased solar power as a competitive source of energy.


Comments

4 responses to “ARENA backs Qld solar farm that will supply 10% of Australia’s large-scale solar”

  1. sunoba Avatar
    sunoba

    The LCOE for this project might be of interest. I analysed the project in May 2015 using my standard methodology; the LCOE was AUD 129 per MWh. See details at http://www.sunoba.blogspot.com (post for 11 May 2015). The latest press releases reveal that the costs and specifications have drifted somewhat since the original announcement; I’ll put a revised estimate for the LCOE as a note to the blog post.

  2. Chris Drongers Avatar
    Chris Drongers

    I am surprised that a PV power station is being proposed for the end of the transmission line from Townsville. I would have thought a number of smaller PV stations at key points on the downstream distribution network would have been more useful. Transmission voltage drops could be corrected using the gas power station at Barcaldine and the subsequent distribution drops supported by the larger number of smaller PV units e.g. at Winton, Aramac, Muttaburra with a number of smaller batteries. A large PV station at Barcaldine does little to support voltage drops on SWER lines near the end of the distribution network.

    1. Calamity_Jean Avatar
      Calamity_Jean

      If the mine gets canceled, the power station can be scaled back.

      1. Chris Drongers Avatar
        Chris Drongers

        More likely, the 55MW gas-fired combined-cycle Barcaldine power station will be throttled back during the day and the saved gas diverted for overseas sale (amazing that a 404km gas pipeline was built to power a 55MW power station, the cost!).

        It seems the steam turbine may have been permanently or temporarily shut down at Barcaldine to increase the rapid-response function of the gas turbines http://www.abc.net.au/news/2008-05-29/green-power-plant-changes-puzzle-barcaldine-mayor/2452236. If so, then the solar plant can run full chat with the gas turbines following. Add daytime batteries and short term gas dependency can be reduced further.

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