Commentary

SA Water tenders for solar and battery storage to manage high power prices

Published by

One Step Off The Grid

South Australia’s largest water and sewerage services supplier has become the latest in Australia to turn to renewables to minimise its electricity costs, announcing plans to commission a commercial-scale solar and storage system at its Crystal Brook Workshop site.

In a Request for Tender launched late last week, SA Water Corporation said it was seeking to build a grid-connected, rooftop solar PV system of more than 100kW, along with a 50kWh battery storage system and “smart controls.”

The company, which manages more than 27,000km of water mains, including 9,266 km in the Adelaide metropolitan area, said it was installing the solar and storage system to manage periods of high electricity prices, and to ensure safe and sustainable delivery of water to customers.

“The proposed system shall be behind the meter, and designed to minimise electricity costs via the ability to dispatch stored energy as required,” the tender request said.

“The system should have the ability to smooth grid supplied energy and also to use stored energy on site or export back to the grid.

“Provision of system integration with remotely operated control and energy monitoring interfaces are to be included as part of the system design.”

SA Water Corporation is just one of many water and waste management utilities around the country making the shift to renewables.

As reported on One Step Off The Grid, the energy intensive industry is increasingly turning to solar and/or wind energy to lower costs and help guarantee supply.

In the regional Victorian city of Portland, Wannon Water’s water and sewerage treatment plant will soon be powered entirely by wind energy, with plans for the construction of an 800kW wind turbine revealed in May.

And in March, also in regional Victoria, North East Water launched a tender to install 43kW of solar panels and 40kW of battery storage at its Yakandandah facility.

In Queensland, the City of Gold Coast is proposing to install a series of floating solar PV arrays on its network of wastewater ponds – both to help power the city’s wastewater treatment plants and to cut evaporation from the ponds.

Applications for the SA Water Corporation solar and storage project can be lodged here. Tenders close at 2pm on Thursday July 20.

This article was originally published on RenewEconomy’s sister site, One Step Off The Grid, which focuses on customer experience with distributed generation. To sign up to One Step’s free weekly newsletter, please 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

Macquarie storage offshoot presents two four-hour battery projects for federal green tick

Storage specialist has nine projects in its portfolio in Australia, with two going public on…

18 June 2026

Frequency penalties are costing some solar farms millions, but this is the market working

Data shows solar farms and big batteries are the biggest loser and winner following changes…

18 June 2026

PV research powerhouse wins fresh Arena funding to pursue ultra-low cost solar

Australia's flagship solar research program has secured another six years of federal funding to continue…

18 June 2026

LGC prices have more than doubled in a few weeks, but who are the buyers – data centres or speculators?

The LGC market is having a moment, doubling in price in a matter of weeks,…

18 June 2026

Demand response trials could open up more than 1 gigawatt of extra grid capacity

This may be one of the most important trials underway today, at least if data…

18 June 2026

“Electro-tech super-levers:” How solar, batteries and EVs are beating out gas and oil across Asia

A new report shows how firmed solar now undercuts most of the new gas power…

18 June 2026