Storage

Tesla community battery installed in Busselton, Western Australia

Published by

One Step Off The Grid

The Western Australia government has installed the state’s fifth grid-connected “community” PowerBank battery – the first for the state’s South West region – in the bayside City of Busselton, around 50km north of Margaret River.

The 464kWh Tesla battery energy storage system, officially launched on Friday, has been installed as part of W.A.’s Distributed Energy Resources Roadmap, which was unveiled by the Labor McGowan government in April.

The battery, installed in nearby Vasse, aims to improve state-owned Western Power’s ability to balance neighbourhood load profiles during the day, while also allowing more homes in the area to install solar panels.

Western Power said the battery would “unlock immediate benefits” for the grid and local community.

Already, Busselton has an impressive distributed PV uptake, with more than 4,700 rooftops featuring solar panels, according to South West Region MLC Sally Talbot.

The “community” part of the equation will come into play later this year when government-owned retailer Synergy will offer eligible solar households the opportunity to store their excess rooftop generation in the battery.

This allows those homes to draw electricity back from the PowerBank during the afternoon and evening peak – when their solar systems stop generating – without having stump up thousands of dollars for their own behind-the-meter battery storage system.

At the same time, their solar will be made “visible” to the network owners and operators, making it easier to manage daytime and peak-time load periods.

To read the full story on RenewEconomy sister site One Step Off The Grid 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

Councils flex their muscle on renewables, laying down the local law on roads, farmland and housing

One local council votes to oppose solar projects proposed for “irrigated or irrigable” land. It's…

8 April 2026

Network giant uses contentious new transmission line to boost regional mobile coverage

Network giant integrates vital telecommunications equipment directly onto the huge powerlines that make up a…

8 April 2026

Fortescue adds another electric excavator, says it is saving a million litres of diesel per unit

Fortescue adds a 15th electric excavator, each of them saving a million litres of diesel…

8 April 2026

The fertiliser gap is Australia’s next supply chain crisis. With low cost renewables, it doesn’t have to be

Australia’s dependence on imports for nitrogen fertiliser leaves the farming sector exposed to supply disruption…

8 April 2026

NZ orders networks to “buy back” rooftop solar during peaks, in suite of DER-boosting reforms

No rebates has meant slow rooftop solar uptake in NZ. But a range of progressive…

8 April 2026

Gas pipeline giant must come clean on the true cost of new projects

Now more than ever, gas companies must be upfront on the fundamentals of projects they…

8 April 2026