Renewables

Kiwi’s new push into solar and battery hybrid projects on menu for UK renewable asset manager

Published by

A UK asset manager is hoovering up New Zealand solar and battery assets, as it jumps on the country’s newest energy opportunity. 

Foresight Group, which owns 34 operating and under-development wind, solar and battery projects in Australia, has bought NZ Clean Energy.

The Kiwi developer comes with three projects in particular that Foresight is keen on, within a larger pipeline of 15 projects totalling more than 2 gigawatts (GW).

Foresight expects solar and battery projects in Masterton (89 megawatts (MW), Darfield (106 MW) and Dannevirke (72 MW) to cost about $A500 million to build with construction starting from this year. 

The company has a “green energy infrastructure” pipeline of 5 GW across the UK, Europe, Australia and now New Zealand.

The move on a pure-play solar and battery developer in New Zealand, a nation which cut its renewables teeth on hydro, geothermal and wind power many years ago, should be no surprise to anyone watching the country’s project connection pipeline.

The March connection pipeline update by grid owner and operator Transpower shows solar and batteries are dominating every stage of the process with 99 currently somewhere in the connection process. 

Solar backed by batteries have become a useful balance for New Zealand’s reliance on hydro, which in drought years is problematic. 

According to RenewMap, there are only six solar and battery projects operating in New Zealand but 102 under development, eight under construction and one, the Glenbrook battery, currently commissioning. 

In total, the country has almost 17 GW of solar and battery projects operating or under way. 

“We established NZCE with the ambition of building a serious pipeline of solar and storage projects across New Zealand,” NZCE chief Harry Simpson said in a statement.

“Partnering with Foresight allows us to move into the next stage and take advanced projects into construction while continuing to expand the platform.”

Foresight believes New Zealand’s electricity market is entering a period of “significant structural change” on the back of rising electricity demand that is currently not being met.

“New Zealand has an exceptional renewable resource base and a supportive policy environment,” Foresight executive director Daniel Beaver said in a statement. 

“We are well positioned to accelerate the delivery of new renewable energy capacity.” 

Foresight says New Zealand’s electricity demand is set to grow by 25 per cent in the next 10 years, from 40 terawatt hours (TWh) now to around 50 TWh, thanks to New Zealand’s early adoption of electric vehicles as well as the electrification of industry on the back of gas shortages.

If you would like to join more than 29,000 others and get the latest clean energy news delivered straight to your inbox, for free, please click here to subscribe to our free daily newsletter.

Rachel Williamson is a science and business journalist, who focuses on climate change-related health and environmental issues.

Rachel Williamson

Rachel Williamson is a science and business journalist, who focuses on climate change-related health and environmental issues.

Share
Published by
Tags: New Zealand

Recent Posts

Developer slams “lengthy and unnecessary” legal battle as council drops case against wind project

Legal bid to overturn state approval of a NSW wind project ends with a whimper,…

27 March 2026

Safety by Design: Scaling solar and storage in Australia with prefabricated EBOS

Safety has become one of the most defining priorities for solar and energy storage developers.…

27 March 2026

Australia has already passed gas – the market is just updating its paperwork

The latest gas market outlook is less of a temporary supply-gap reprieve and more the…

27 March 2026

“You cannot put the genie back in the bottle:” Forrest says world energy markets have changed forever

Andrew Forrest says fossil fuels carry volatility, political cost and risks for mums and dads…

27 March 2026

“We had to wait for the grass to grow:” How an Abbott-inspired community solar farm finally got built

Tony Abbott's climate attacks inspired a local community to build a first of its kind…

27 March 2026

Energy Insiders Podcast: The remarkable story of Australia’s first community-owned solar farm

A solar farm inspired by Tony Abbott's climate attacks has finally been opened. Mhairi Fraser…

27 March 2026