Renewables

New wind and solar farms begin production in NSW

Published by

Following on the coat-tails of the much bigger but long-delayed Sunraysia solar farm, the 39MW Molong solar farm in the New South Wales region of the same name has started registering “small blips” of generation on the National Electricity Market after being connected to the grid.

In a LinkedIn post on Wednesday, network operator TransGrid congratulated project owner AMP Energy on the registration of Molong Solar Farm, effective November 10, 2020.

And its arrival on the grid was confirmed by Watt Clarity’s Paul McArdle, who charted Molong’s first “small blips” on the Australian Energy Market Operator’s production system in the graph below. (Look hard, it’s in orange to the bottom right).


“The solar farm has an installed capacity of 30MW and connects to the network at the 66kV bus of TransGrid’s Molong Substation,” Transgrid said. 
“Once completed, Molong Solar Farm will produce enough solar energy to displace carbon dioxide emissions equivalent to 10,500 cars a year.”

Also joining Sunraysia and Molong on the NSW grid was Ratch Australia’s 227MW Collector wind farm, in the state’s Southern Tablelands.

The wind farm, which has PPAs with supermarket chain Aldi and with infigen Energy, is connected to the TransGrid network between Marulan Substation and Yass Substation, around 55km north of Canberra.

“Collector Wind Farm is expected to generate around 530GWh of safe, clean, reliable electricity a year, enough to power more than 70,000 Australian homes, making it one of the biggest wind farms in NSW to date,” TransGrid said in another LinkedIn post welcoming the project to the grid.

To follow will be the Wellington solar farm, a 200MW project that has been built in the NSW Great Western Plains region, the output of which will go to Snowy Hydro under a 15-year contract.

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

Golden moment: Australia’s biggest wind farm becomes first to reach 1 GW of output

Australia's biggest operating wind farm has set a stunning new record, becoming the first in…

12 June 2026

The quiet battery: What household batteries reveal about flexibility before full orchestration

The passive battery is not a new phenomenon. What is new is that its value…

12 June 2026

State utility eyes 8-12 hour energy storage investment after “standout” success of four-hour big battery

State-owned utility says it is in discussions to invest in non-lithium technologies with up to…

12 June 2026

Depleted batteries and very expensive gas: How a two-day heatwave led to a near doubling of quarterly prices

Batteries have been protecting consumers from price spikes in most states over summer. But they…

12 June 2026

Solar Insiders Podcast: The public power company plugging the gaps

State Electricity Commission CEO Chris Miller on how the government-owned energy company is filling gaps…

12 June 2026

Australia’s electricity market needs better price signals that reflect local conditions

Australia’s electricity prices ignore location, even though the grid doesn’t. This mismatch drives congestion, curtailment,…

12 June 2026