Solar

Canadian Solar inks new Australian PPA with Amazon for output of NSW solar farm

Published by

One Step Off The Grid

Online retailing giant Amazon has signed a new deal for the supply of renewable energy for its Australian operations, agreeing with Canadian Solar to buy the output of its 146MW Gunnedah solar farm in New South Wales.

The deal is one of many power purchase agreements being entered into by Amazon globally as it aims for 80 per cent renewable energy supply by 2024 and 100 per cent by 2030, on a path to net zero carbon by 2040.

It is a first, however, for the “e-tailer” in Australia and one of the first for Canadian Solar in Australia, where the PV giant says it is making its “strategic entry” into the local large C&I PPA market.*

“Canadian Solar is a leading developer in the Australian solar market, where we have a pipeline of nearly 1.2 GW, including 335MW of projects ready to build,” said Canadian Solar chairman and CEO Shawn Qu in a statement on Thursday.

“We look forward to growing our solar projects and solar module supply businesses in Australia, while expanding into other C&I sectors in this region. We see a bright future ahead as Australia continues to expand its renewable energy market.”

The Gunnedah project is a single-axis tracking project under construction west of Tamworth in regional New South Wales, which Canadian Solar says is expected to reach commercial generation by 2021.

Its original developer was Photon Energy, which solar a 25 per cent share to Canadian Solar as part of a co-development agreement two years ago. Canadian Solar then took over completely in August last year.

“Canadian Solar is very proud to sign this power purchase agreement with Amazon. Our team has worked hard to bring this opportunity to fruition, and we look forward to further collaboration with Amazon, while we bring the Gunnedah project to commercial operation,” Qu said.

“We are honored to help Amazon meet its renewable energy goals by utilizing our solar technology and development expertise.”

In its own statement about the Australian PPA – announced alongside new renewable off-take deals in the US and Europe – Amazon said it was “on a mission” to meet the Paris climate target 10 years early.

“These new renewable energy projects are part of our roadmap to 80% renewable energy by 2024 and 100% renewable energy by 2030,” said Kara Hurst, VP of sustainability, Amazon.

“In addition to the environmental benefits inherently associated with running applications in the cloud, investing in renewable energy is a critical step toward addressing our carbon footprint globally.”

*This article has been corrected to reflect the fact that Canadian Solar has entered into a PPA in Australia before, via the Victorian government’s Renewable Energy Auction for the Carwarp Solar Farm.

Sophie Vorrath

Sophie is editor of Renew Economy and editor of its sister site, One Step Off The Grid . She is the co-host of the Solar Insiders Podcast. Sophie has been writing about clean energy for more than a decade.

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

Survey finds most Australians support fuel tax credit cap, and didn’t know miners pocketed so many billions

Survey finds most Australians support cap for diesel fuel rebate, and most didn't even know…

6 May 2026

National fuel reserve “future-proofed” in $10 billion plan, but critics say it is “junk logic”

Federal government to spend $10 billion to "future proof" supply of fuel and fertiliser, but…

6 May 2026

How rooftop solar and home batteries became “kryptonite” to big coal and the fossil fuel industry

Smart Energy Council chief uses one of his last speeches in the role to celebrate…

6 May 2026

Neoen powers up one of Australia’s biggest solar farms, co-located big battery to come

One of Australia's biggest solar farms – and Neoen's second-biggest utility-scale PV asset, globally –…

6 May 2026

Real zero means not having to worry about despots, oligarchs, fruitcakes and invaders, says Forrest

Forrest slams Australia's fossil fuel dependence, diesel rebate and use of fake offsets, and says…

6 May 2026

The Driven Podcast: EV sales surge, FBT survives, and petrol starts to wobble

Sarah Aubrey joins for the first time as co-host of The Driven Podcast as we…

6 May 2026