If you care about battery storage and distributed energy in Australia, you’re probably aware that a number of battery incentive programs are now available through various state & territory governments (not counting the federal Labor party’s election promise).
Interestingly, they are being delivered by governments from both of the major political parties – a fair indication of which way the winds are blowing longer-term.
SwitchDin sees the introduction of these programs as the beginning of a wave that will speed up the (now unstoppable) transformation of Australia’s energy ecosystem.
Especially encouraging is the fact that a number of these schemes go beyond simply incentivising batteries for homes, taking steps to ensure that batteries (and other devices) can be controlled and coordinated to provide grid services or to participate in energy markets – services that we can help to support.
We’ve put this list as a stocktake of which governments are now offering programs to bolster uptake of home battery storage.
The table below provides a state-by-state roundup of what small-scale battery system support programs are now in effect or being floated around with a reasonable chance of implementation, while the text that follows provides more detail about each of the schemes.
The ACT has led the way in supporting batteries in distributed energy for several years now, with the territory’s Next Generation Energy Storage program about to enter its third round since 2016, with $3 million committed for the current tranche.
The aim of the program is for 5,000 ACT households to have batteries installed under the scheme by 2020. Battery installations are incentivised on a ‘per kilowatt’ (power capacity) basis when the customer chooses a package from a pre-approved supplier using pre-approved products.
The ACT is also running a 250-home VPP pilot program involving a subset of homes that have installed batteries under the Next Generation program, and is home to a lithium battery performance testing lab.
The NSW Liberal government has a collection of clean energy initiatives spanning an array of energy system elements.
Of particular interest for distributed energy are:
The battery incentive is one component of the larger $1.34 billion Solar Homes rebate, which knocks as much as $2,225 off the cost of having a solar system installed and also offers incentives for efficient water heating systems (SwitchDin has suggested all of these systems should be VPP-ready, even without batteries)
The federal Labor party made headlines last week with its announcement of a suite of initiatives supporting battery storage & renewable energy with the stated triple goal of a) reducing emissions, b) lowering electricity prices, and c) improving energy system reliability.
For households, the program of most interest is the proposed $500 per kilowatt-hour (kWh) incentive for battery storage systems up to 4kWh – or a maximum subsidy of $2,000 per system. The ALP says it will commit $200 million for up to 100,000 households; the party says this will be a stepping stone in a roadmap towards one million home battery systems by 2025.
Households will not be allowed to ‘double dip’ into both state and federal incentives, and most of the state-based programs are more generous than the federal proposal. This means that if it comes into effect this program may become the default fallback option for homes in states without a dedicated battery program – a catch-all for the left-behinds.
Other components of the party’s broad-reaching energy platform include a $5 billion ‘Energy Modernisation Fund’ administered by the Clean Energy Finance Corporation (CEFC), a 50% renewable energy target by 2030, and support for community-based energy programs. Labor is also promising to take up the National Energy Guarantee as the framework for its energy policy if elected.
SwitchDin is building the enabling platform for the distributed energy system of the future. We integrate inverters, batteries, power meters and other controllable devices to enable vendor-agnostic virtual power plants and microgrids while providing monitoring & control to end users & fleet managers.
This post was published on November 30, 2018 1:39 pm
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With all these State Gov initiatives in place no wonder battery manufacturers are making a move into Australia.
Yes I know SA atm but I expect more announcements coming soon.
I notice from SA to Qld only one government is missing in action.
When will the Fed’s make a move and I do not mean building Snowy 2, but actually realising that Au with its abundant blessing of solar irradiance, it is just good business to put PV and batteries on every building, car park and do a plan for community Solar and Battery for those in high rise or housing that do not lend themselves to the installation.
Perhaps next year we will know.
I assume you are referring to the WA Government which is soon expected to announce a battery program. The SWIS has a significant need as the daily minimum load is regularly occurring at 1-1.30pm rather than the historic 3-3.30am period. In WA's case there most certainly must be VPP access/control of the battery in order that the full system security benefits are made available to the network.