Solar

MPower starts work on two more 5MW solar farms for South Australia

Published by

Renewable microgrid specialist MPower has begun early works on two new 5MW solar farms in South Australia, as the Tag Pacific subsidiary continues its focus on smaller grid-connected PV projects.

MPower said late last week it had secured Limited Notices to Proceed for the two solar farms, being developed by Astronergy Solar Australia.

The Notices include preliminary designs and associated activities to an initial value of $0.5 million, while MPower and Astroenergy prepared to execute full Engineering, Procurement and Construction contracts for the projects, worth a combined $8-9 million.

MPower said the two new projects – which follow last year’s commissioning of two 5MW solar farms at Mannum and Port Pirie, also in South Australia – aligned with the company’s strategy of targeting smaller projects that were easier to connect to an increasingly congested grid.

MPower said it was keen to work with the “blue chip” Astronergy on the new projects, which it said would “incorporate the latest technologies.”

“A key focus for MPower has been to build strong relationships with asset owners who prioritise power system reliability and understand the value of a well delivered project,” said MPower CEO Nathan Wise.

“MPower has developed an enviable capability in the successful delivery of 5MW solar farms and continues to strengthen its order book in the growing renewable energy sector.”

MPower has not been the only company to turn its attention to smaller-scale solar farms. Meralli Solar has been using Belectric PEG frame technology to develop sub-10MW projects in a short timeframe and with a much reduced environmental impact.

Meralli’s smaller-scale projects – described as “cutting edge” for their use of both DC optimisers and DC coupled battery architecture for central inverters – can get by restrictions being imposed by network operators, and maximise the output of both the solar farm and any battery storage, which can then be sent to the grid at times of peak demand or in the evening.

Elsewhere, the UK-based $150 million Foresight Renewable Energy Income Fund has extended its focus on smaller-scale wind and solar projects to Australia, via loans of $5-$30 million aimed at filling a gap for smaller-scale solar and wind developers looking for project finance.

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

NSW awards contracts to six huge 8-hour battery projects, including the biggest in Australia

NSW hails biggest and best result yet for long duration storage, with six massive batteries…

5 February 2026

Federal parliament launches inquiry into solar panel reuse and recycling

A parliamentary inquiry will examine the scale of the waste challenge looming on the flip-side…

4 February 2026

Balcony solar is powering apartments from Berlin to Barcelona. So why not in Australia?

Small, plug-in PV systems are populating balconies across Europe and the US, but many Australian…

4 February 2026

“Appetite for risk:” Net Zero Fund to offer super-cheap loans for industrial decarbonisation

The new Net Zero Fund will launch in mid-2026 with a $5bn kitty of cheap…

4 February 2026

Giant Pilbara wind, solar and hydrogen hub dumped by bp wins $21 million government grant

Plans for an up to 26 GW wind, solar and green hydrogen hub have new…

4 February 2026

Wind and solar curtailment: Beneath the headline numbers from 2025

Curtailment remains one of the clearest signs of the challenges facing existing and new solar…

4 February 2026