Solar

More than 6,000 sheep now call Australia’s largest solar farm home

Published by

New England Solar, a 400MW solar farm that currently shares the title of Australia’s largest solar farm, is not only generating at peak output, but is also now home to more than 6,000 sheep who call the 1,200-hectare site home.

The New England Solar farm is being built in two stages, with the 400MW stage 1 already operating and supplying electricity to New South Wales and Queensland, and a further 320MW solar farm and 200MW/2-hour battery under construction.

In addition to co-locating a battery energy system with the solar farm, New England Solar is also co-located with several thousand sheep – mainly merinos and other cross breeds.

According to developer Acen Renewables, more than 6,000 of the woolly animals are being rotated on and off the project site, which is now serving as a new feeding ground.

The sheep will spend six weeks on the land before being herded back to their sheds for health checks or vaccinations before then being moved on to other paddocks or straight back to their green solar pastures.

As can be seen in the above video the sheep are helping keep vegetation down, which in turn means less man hours for mowing, and providing feed for the sheep.

Acen Renewables expects it will take a few seasons to fully assess the benefits of solar grazing, however early signs already point to solar panels creating their own microclimate which has proven ideal for the woolly lawn mowers.

“They (the solar panels) shade the early morning pastures which prolongs the effects of the dew,” said Richard Munsie, one of two project landholders running sheep across the site.

“That helps the grass grow. And the panels also give shade to sheep and protection from frosts.

“We might even be able to run more sheep due to the climate created by the panels, but we’ll see.”

default

Cameron Wood, another project landholder, said installing solar panels on the land has also helped them drought proof their operations while still being able to let the sheep feed under the panels.

“The fresh grass and shade are a great combination – the sheep just look really happy,” said Wood.

“We’re looking forward to getting them in the sheds this winter for shearing, and their wool baled up for market.”

Joshua S. Hill is a Melbourne-based journalist who has been writing about climate change, clean technology, and electric vehicles for over 15 years. He has been reporting on electric vehicles and clean technologies for Renew Economy and The Driven since 2012. His preferred mode of transport is his feet.

Joshua S Hill

Joshua S. Hill is a Melbourne-based journalist who has been writing about climate change, clean technology, and electric vehicles for over 15 years. He has been reporting on electric vehicles and clean technologies for Renew Economy and The Driven since 2012. His preferred mode of transport is his feet.

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

“This has to change:” Flurry of late orders breaks wind drought and gives global turbine giants hope for 2026

A flurry of late orders has broken the wind investment drought in Australia, with global…

23 December 2025

Modelling spot prices in a post-coal grid, when big batteries will become the price setters

Electricity prices can be kept near today’s levels in a post-coal National Electricity Market, but…

23 December 2025

Traditional Owners accuse huge NT solar and battery project of “worst consultation you can think of”

A legal move to extinguish any native claims over land proposed to host the giant…

23 December 2025

Energy Insiders Podcast: Is the wind drought over?

We discuss some of the major events of the past year - the dominance of…

23 December 2025

SEC steps in to rescue another stalled project, an Australian-first wind farm overlooking coal ruins

SEC to build state's first publicly owned wind farm, that will be the first to…

23 December 2025