Hydrogen

Solar hydrogen plant to power Queensland college, golf course, buses

Published by

A “campus-scale” renewable hydrogen plant will be developed at a Queensland school that specialises in vocational training and golf instruction, in a joint venture between Hills International College and Energy Estate.

Energy Estate said on Monday that it had formed a partnership with the College to jointly develop the Jimboomba Renewable Hydrogen Plant, including a solar PV system and hydrogen production and storage facility, at the Hills Jimboomba campus south of Brisbane.

The project is being developed by Energy Estate under its HydrogenGrowth platform, which aims to develop a range of large and small scale “green hydrogen” opportunities in Australia and overseas, including a number of large-scale plants in Queensland.

International renewables developer, Elecseed, and Korean government-owned utility KOMIPO are also supporting the project through their investment to expand the existing 250kW Hills Foundation Solar Farm, Energy Estate said.

The plan is to expand that solar farm, which was commissioned in 2017, to 2MW to supply the hydrogen plant being developed by Energy Estate, which in turn will supply Hills Educational Foundation and Hills Golf Club with 24/7 renewable power, while also fuelling the campus’ coaches.

“This is a great opportunity to develop the use of hydrogen in south east Queensland in a practical, distributed environment,” said Energy Estate director of hydrogen, Kevin Peakman.

“We are also pleased to support the carbon neutral goals of the College and provide a meaningful, hands-on opportunity to share that knowledge with the College and its students.”

For the Hills Educational Foundation, the not-for-profit that runs the College, the project fits with its commitment to provide students with both theoretical and practical hands-on learning experience in renewable energy and hydrogen production.

“The Foundation has progressed towards a carbon neutral goal by establishing large ground based solar facilities, converting our diesel buses to run on hydrogen resulting in reduced diesel consumption, and are in the process of establishing a green hydrogen production facility and energy storage capacity,” said CEO Joseph Marinov.

“This multi-faceted project, that also includes potentially supplying oxygen to the adjacent wastewater treatment plant to reduce operational costs, demonstrates how the use of renewable energy to generate hydrogen can advance the hydrogen economy in Australia.”

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

Gas share in global electricity mix falls for fifth consecutive year, pushed out by cheaper renewables

Share of gas in global electricity mix has fallen for the fifth consecutive year, with…

11 June 2026

Two Telstra-contracted solar farms power up in two separate states

Spanish energy outift commissions two solar plants in two separate states of Australia, both of…

11 June 2026

Home battery installations reach the 430,000 mark, but get smaller as new settings do their job

The number of home batteries installed through the federal rebate has now passed 430,000, as…

11 June 2026

Climate scientists warn of record rate of global warming, carbon budget to be exhausted in 3 years

Emissions of climate-warming pollutants are at an all-time high, mainly from the burning of fossil…

11 June 2026

“We cannot compete:” Why global inverter giant quit Australia’s home solar market

SMA boss Jürgen Reinert says decision to close down its Australian domestic business driven by…

11 June 2026

Energy Insiders Podcast: “The grid doesn’t need rotating mass”

Jürgen Reinart, the CEO of inverter giant SMA, on why the grid can function without…

11 June 2026