Perth shopping centre installs 312kW solar array – WA’s largest

Published by

One Step Off The Grid

Western Australia’s commercial solar market got a boost this week, after the state’s largest rooftop solar system, a 312kW array on the Broadway Fair Shopping Centre in the Perth suburb of Nedlands, was launched on Thursday.

The system, made up of a total of 948 PV panels supplied by SunEdison and installed by Infinite Energy, is expected to account for more than 30 per cent of the shopping centre’s electricity needs – almost 500,000kWh a year.

According to a statement, the installation followed a major structural upgrade to the the shopping centre which saw its entire roof replaced.

“We were looking for  solution to grow income as well as provide a buffer against escalating costs,” said Broadway Fair general manager Paul Avon-Smith.

“Sun Edison and Infinite Energy presented us with a solar solution that made strong economic sense with the environmental benefits of reduced carbon emission being a nice bonus.”

Avon-Smith said the big job – which required around 6km of wiring – was made exceptionally simple by the project team, who delivered it on budget.

Sun Edison, meanwhile, thinks the project could help deliver the message to more businesses in Western Australia – and perhaps around the country – that clean energy makes real and immediate economic sense.

“People are catching on in a big way that going solar is not only good for the environment, but translates into real cost savings,” said Sun Edison’s head of commercial and industrial sales, Nick Brass.

A boost to momentum in Australia’s commercial solar market – which has been slow burner compared to the residential market, and to commercial markets in comparable countries – would be welcomed by the local solar industry, which has so far endured the worst start to a year since 2012, in terms of growth.

As we reported in mid-February, PV growth in January 2016 faired even worse than in “a depressed” 2015, according to data from solar analysts SunWiz, with volumes falling back across every significant size bracket excluding the 7-10kW range and for systems 2.5kW and less.

This article was originally published on RenewEconomy sister site One Step Off the Grid. To sign up to the weekly newsletter click here

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

Home battery numbers shrink for the first time since rebate launch, as installers take a beat

Even the booming home battery market could not escape the January doldrums, with the summer…

6 February 2026

We need more hydro, Turnbull says: But would many smaller projects have been better than Snowy 2.0?

Malcolm Turnbull says more "simpler" pumped hydro needed as solar outpaces wind, and insists that…

6 February 2026

First solar-battery hybrid sends power into evening peak, heralding radical changes for Australia’s main grid

The first solar-battery hybrid has begun sending power into Australia's main grid in the evening.…

6 February 2026

Is AEMO still fit for purpose? Review to probe governance of energy market operator

Transparency, accountability, membership and corporate structure will all come under the microscope as part of…

6 February 2026

Energy Insiders Podcast: Malcolm Turnbull on hydro, LNP, One Nation and Trump

Former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull is pushing for more hydro, but is still pumped up…

6 February 2026

Australia urged to release “terrifying” climate security analysis after UK report flags ecosystem collapse by 2030

The Australian government has been urged to come clean on security threats posed by climate…

6 February 2026