Redflow to start selling home battery storage in March

Published by

One Step Off The Grid

ASX-listed battery storage company Redflow says it expects to launch its “plug and play” home battery storage unit as soon as next month, with the first residential installations set to take place in June.

Brisbane-based Redflow, whose unique zinc bromine flow battery technology has previously targeted the commercial market, as well as off-grid mining applications, said in an ASX release on Wednesday that it planned to launch its entry into the residential energy storage space at the end of March 2016.

“Product information provided at this launch will include pictures of the new Redflow external battery enclosure and its use in a residential context, performance specifications and system pricing examples,” the company said.

Redflow said the company was already seeing “substantial interest” in the home battery units from its shareholders, who would be offered a discount on them to support the initial phase of the launch process.

The company said it was also working with various installer partners to set up some initial ‘exemplar’ residential installations in a number of different settings.

“Based on the expected timetable for resuming battery manufacture with Flex (as noted above), we are expecting the first residential customer system installations featuring …to occur from June 2016,” the release said.

The company said it also intended to deliver technology to complement the home batteries, including the Redflow Battery Management System (BMS).

This would allow an installer with nothing more than a web browser to achieve commissioning, configuration, and interface of a Redflow battery with multiple readily available inverter/charger electronics systems on the market today, it said.

The ASX report also noted the company’s successful completion of its “end user trial” in an African commercial solar power project, with orders expected to follow.

This article was originally published on RE sister site One Step Off The Grid. Click here to sign up for the weekly newsletter

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

Developer slams “lengthy and unnecessary” legal battle as council drops case against wind project

Legal bid to overturn state approval of a NSW wind project ends with a whimper,…

27 March 2026

Safety by Design: Scaling solar and storage in Australia with prefabricated EBOS

Safety has become one of the most defining priorities for solar and energy storage developers.…

27 March 2026

Australia has already passed gas – the market is just updating its paperwork

The latest gas market outlook is less of a temporary supply-gap reprieve and more the…

27 March 2026

“You cannot put the genie back in the bottle:” Forrest says world energy markets have changed forever

Andrew Forrest says fossil fuels carry volatility, political cost and risks for mums and dads…

27 March 2026

“We had to wait for the grass to grow:” How an Abbott-inspired community solar farm finally got built

Tony Abbott's climate attacks inspired a local community to build a first of its kind…

27 March 2026

Energy Insiders Podcast: The remarkable story of Australia’s first community-owned solar farm

A solar farm inspired by Tony Abbott's climate attacks has finally been opened. Mhairi Fraser…

27 March 2026