Categories: Battery/StorageSolar

Queensland school installs solar and battery storage – an Australian first

Published by

As the Greens’ latest renewable energy policy plank underscored this week, schools and solar PV make a great pairing. Add storage and it can get even better.
A great recent example of this can be found at Bundaberg Christian College. Located in Queensland’s top solar postcode, the college – which already harvests and treats all of its own water and sewerage – takes sustainability seriously. Harvesting its own electricity was the next logical step.
For this, the College turned to local outfit GEM Energy, who along with Melbourne-based inverter maker and energy management specialist Selectronic, designed and installed a big enough solar and battery storage system to drastically reduce the College’s reliance on grid supplied electricity.
The result, pictured below, was a 194kW solar system with 250kWh of battery storage (located in the white container to the right of the water tanks), completed and switched on in March, which claims to be the largest hybrid solar and storage array ever to be installed at an Australian school.

As One Step readers would know, this is not the largest solar array ever installed on a school. The honours for that achievement will go to Canberra’s Amaroo School, which last year commissioned a 600kW rooftop PV system; currently, they are claimed by Mazenod College in Melbourne, which installed a 270kW PV array in 2014.
But the Bundaberg Christian College’s 194kW solar system would certainly be the largest, and perhaps the only, school-based system to be paired with battery storage; or to be built in conjunction with – and without hampering – a rooftop water harvesting system.
The 700-panel solar array was also designed to factor in the switching of the school’s lighting from fluorescent to LED, thus reducing its total size and cost. Even the used fluoro lights did not go to waste, but were donated to a school in Vanuatu that had suffered damage due to Cyclone Pam.
The control and battery component of the project is housed in an onsite 20-foot storage container (pictured above) consisting of a three-phase SP PRO system and the 250kWh battery bank, which is made up of 30 Hitachi lead acid batteries (both pictured below).

These store excess electricity generated by the panels during daylight hours to supply overnight demand, including for security lighting and computer servers.
Annually, the system is expected to save the school up to $100,000 by cutting its use of grid electricity by as much as 80 per cent. With these savings, the system is expected to pay for itself in seven years.
“In anyone’s terms, that’s a good deal,” said the College’s business manager, Evan Keune, in an interview with the ABC.
“Once the solar really kicks in around 10 o’clock, we’re using minimal power til about two in the afternoon,” he said.
“A lot of schools have small solar systems from government grants, but they’re only 30 or 40 kilowatt systems, whereas ours is 170 plus batteries,” he said.
“With the viability of solar and batteries, this is now coming into play as an option for a lot of schools and a lot of businesses.
“We’ve already had a couple of schools contact us because they’ve heard what we’re doing and they’re quite interested.”

This post was published on June 7, 2016 3:30 pm

View Comments

  • Fantastic to see - next step, an entire suburb planned for these and emerging renewable energy technologies.

Recent Posts

Rooftop solar growth nears record levels, led by Queensland and commercial installs

For a typically slow month, April 2024 has neared record levels of new rooftop solar…

May 2, 2024

Off-grid solar and battery system “twice the size of the MCG” slashes almond farm energy bill

AGL Energy completes installation of a huge stand-alone solar and battery microgrid that will power…

May 2, 2024

Australian made solar panels now available through more than 100 retailers

Australia’s only solar panel manufacturer says its retail network has more than doubled over the…

May 1, 2024

Solar apartments: State opens offer of up to $100,000 to install shared rooftop PV

Solar for Apartments Program offers up to $100,000 to eligible bodies corporate, 50% as a…

April 29, 2024

Home electrification rebate flooded with interest as gas exodus gears up

State government-backed rebate designed to install bulk residential rooftop PV and electric hot water has…

April 29, 2024

Landlords join call for rebates to help renters and apartments get solar and go electric

People who live in apartments are less likely to benefit from solar power or efficient…

April 19, 2024