Renewables

Kangaroos add 200kW solar system at North Melbourne football HQ

Published by

One Step Off The Grid

The North Melbourne Kangaroos have become the latest Australian Football League team to add solar power to their club headquarters, with the installation of a 200kW rooftop PV system.

The $462,000 project, which was installed by Envirogroup and partly financed by the Clean Energy Finance Corporation was co-funded by the City of Melbourne and the Kangaroos.

According to the City of Melbourne, it can be remotely monitored via its Enphase Energy microinverter system, which allows the City to track individual panel performance, including inverter temperatures and power output, and alert it of any panel failures.

Arden Street Oval in North Melbourne – home to the AFL’s Kangaroos.
Arden Street Oval in North Melbourne – home to the AFL’s Kangaroos.

North Melbourne CEO and managing director Carl Dilena said the system – comprising one 100kW array on the Arden St club’s roof and another 100kW on the adjoining North Melbourne Recreation Centre – would cut the club’s grid-supplied energy use by 22 per cent.

“A big thank you must go to the City of Melbourne for helping us make this environmentally-friendly project a reality. We are proud of our successful, ongoing relationship with the City of Melbourne,” he said.

North Melbourne CEO Carl Dilena and Melbourne City Councillor Arron Wood

Chair of the City of Melbourne’s environment portfolio, Councillor Arron Wood, said that powering the “iconic building” with renewable energy illustrated the potential for be installed on buildings of all shapes and sizes.

“North Melbourne Football Club is one of the world’s oldest sporting clubs,” he said. “This project is a great example of how an iconic sporting club can work with government to reduce carbon emissions, promote clean energy jobs, and help the environment.

“We are installing 300kW worth of rooftop solar on Council and other community facilities which will mean we’ll pay less to power buildings like pools and gyms which have large energy loads,” Cr Wood said.

Wood said the Kangaroos’ 800-panel system was now one of the largest in the City of Melbourne, which had a total of 855 residential and commercial solar systems installed, producing 4.24MW of energy.

And it is not the only AFL club to tap solar power; the Richmond Tigers – also in Melbourne – installed a 99.7kW rooftop solar system at their Punt Road headquarters and training facility in September 2014.

This article was originally published on RE sister site One Step Off The Grid. To sign up for the weekly newsletter, click here.

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

How renewables and EVs can shield Australia from the economic fallout of Trump’s war

When conflicts affect global oil and gas routes, Australians feel it. But Australia has all the…

6 March 2026

Community battery launches next to community solar system, to help power regional resilience

Community focused retailer launches first of seven batteries to be deployed across regional Victoria and…

6 March 2026

Energy Insiders Podcast: The revolution in electric trucking

The Australian trucking industry is about to experience an electric revolution, with plunging battery prices…

6 March 2026

Solar farms hit by cuts to grid output ratings due to changes in energy flows, but some big batteries are happy

Latest grid ratings include bad news for solar farms in some areas, but a boost…

6 March 2026

Last panel goes up at first solar-battery hybrid project to connect to Australia’s main grid

Final panel installed at Australia's first large scale solar-battery hybrid facility to connect to the…

6 March 2026

Offshore wind project says it’s “fully prepared” as it heads into full environmental assessment

Plans to develop a 1GW wind farm in waters off the coast of Gippsland have…

6 March 2026