Renewables

Malaysian giant plans to build up to 2GW Australian wind and solar in five years

Published by

Malaysian infrastructure giant Gamuda Berhad has announced it will turn its Australian market focus to renewables, with plans to build a 1 to 2 gigawatt portfolio of wind and solar projects within five years.

Gamuda, which in Australia is developing three major road and rail projects worth a total of $4.5 billion, says it also intends to bid for major EPC contracts in solar, wind, pumped hydro and transmission network upgrades and expansion.

It says it aims to generate $2 billion revenue from energy projects alone over the coming half-decade.

“Our vision is to become a leading sustainable energy contractor and a key equity partner for the long term with a particular focus on solar, wind, pumped hydro and transmission,” said Gamuda CEO Ewan Yee.

“This vision builds upon our ongoing success in the Australia infrastructure market and is informed by our energy and water infrastructure experience across a number of projects globally. 

“We also see our demonstrated key strengths in completing complex large-scale linear construction, tunnelling, hydro and geotech in Australia as highly suited to now transition to energy projects,” Yee said.

This sort of skill set will be very welcome in Australia as the national push to 82 per cent renewables by 2030 gathers pace. Of particular interest is Gamuda Berhad’s shareholding in major Malaysian solar contracting company, ERS Energy, which offers access to a “robust” PV supply chain.

Jarred Hardman, Gamuda Engineering Australia’s chief strategy and growth officer, says the company brings with it a “ready to go” solution to help meet the rapidly approaching renewable targets.

“By looking to acquire development rights to shovel-ready projects we can construct and own in solar and wind, while we also secure EPC contracts in transmission and pumped hydro,” Hardman says.

“Our goal is to provide an end-to-end solution to fast-track energy projects and quickly gain a foothold, in keeping with our strategy in infrastructure which has seen us build a $4.5 billion workbook within two to three years.”

Gamuda’s push into Australian renewables follows that of Malaysia oil giant Petronas, whose renewables arm Gentari last year unveiled plans to build a portfolio of up to 8GW of solar, wind and storage capacity in Australia.

Gentari in February 2023 year took control of Wirsol Australia, a leading solar developer, before unveiling the company’s rebranding and expansion plans at a launch event in Sydney in September.

The company’s plans include big investments in India, Malaysia, and between 5GW and 8GW of renewables and storage capacity in Australia, with a mix of green fields development and buying existing assets.

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
Tags: Gamuda

Recent Posts

“Fewer people calling on coal:” Suburban hotspots revealed as home battery rebates top 200,000

Home battery rebates have already topped 200,000, and heading to two million by 2030, with…

17 January 2026

Home battery installations will match the scale of Snowy Hydro scheme – in a single year

Household battery numbers continue to defy all predictions, and they now look set to match…

16 January 2026

“Too valuable to throw out:” Labor announces first national solar panel recycling pilot program

Federal government announces $25 million for a rooftop solar recycling pilot, with up to 100…

16 January 2026

Fortescue begins work on first wind farm, with self-lifting towers and Australia’s biggest turbines

Andrew Forrest's Fortescue starts construction of its first wind farm, featuring unique "self-lifting" tower technology…

16 January 2026

Standalone battery proposed for old gravel pit gets final planning tick despite long distance objectors

A $200 million standalone battery project that attracted no objections from within 50kms of the…

16 January 2026

Australia’s climate hit regions will need fit-for-future science and modelling

It won’t come as much consolation to Victorian communities picking through the burnt rubble from…

16 January 2026