• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
One Step Off The Grid

One Step Off The Grid

Solar, storage and distributed energy news

  • Solar
  • Battery/Storage
  • Off-Grid
  • Efficiency
  • Software
  • Podcasts
  • Tariffs
  • Electric Vehicles
  • Electrification

Solar and battery microgrids slash diesel and dollars in six remote towns

November 13, 2024 by Sophie Vorrath Leave a Comment

Solar and battery system at Norseman. Source: Horizon Power

A more than $15 million bid to add large-scale solar and battery storage to the power systems of six regional Western Australia towns has been completed, with the installation of a 758kW PV system and 336kWh BESS in Norseman.

State-owned utility Horizon Power said on Wednesday that Norseman, in WA’s Esperance region, is the sixth and final town to get a solar farm and battery energy storage system (BESS) as part of its Mid West Solar Program, which kicked off in 2021with $13.5 million in federal funding.

The six solar and battery systems are owned by Horizon and operated and maintained by Pacific Energy, the same WA-based company that has designed and built each of the renewables-based microgrids.

Pacific Energy chief Jamie Cullen says the solar and battery systems have been designed to work alongside existing diesel generation systems to decarbonise the towns’ power supplies and improve the reliability of supply.

“The six solar systems have a combined capacity of over 2,000kW, and have generated and exported more than 1.8 million kilowatt hours of solar energy between January and November this year,” Cullen says.

“Better still, the 4,300kWh of BESS across the six sites will store excess solar energy generated during the day to improve grid stability and power quality and ensure the towns can benefit from renewable energy even when the sun isn’t shining.”

Horizon says the energy systems installed across the six Mid West and Goldfields towns, including Cue, Sandstone, Yalgoo, Meekatharra and Wiluna, will save around $900,000 a year in operation costs, dampening the impact of fluctuations of fuel prices.

“The solar and battery systems provide a cleaner, greener alternative for remote towns that are currently relying solely on diesel generation for their energy needs,” Horizon chief Stephanie Unwin said on Wednesday.

“As well as helping to reduce carbon emissions, the solar and battery systems will deliver a lower cost solution for these communities.”

Horizon is nowin the process of commissioning another five standalone renewables-first generators to supply power to remote towns in the north of Western Australia, backed by either a battery or potentially a hydrogen system.

This time around the five systems will be expected to provide almost 10,000 kWh of power to 10,272 homes and businesses in Broome, Derby, Camballin/Looma, Fitzroy Crossing and Halls Creek.

According to Expressions of Interest documents published in May, all of these systems must meet minimum annual renewable energy requirements, which for the biggest towns – Broome and Derby – is 80 per cent.

But Horizon has also made it clear that it is most interested in any proposals that can help it beat those minimums over the next five-10 years.

Sophie Vorrath
Sophie Vorrath

Sophie is editor of One Step Off The Grid and editor of its sister site, Renew Economy. Sophie has been writing about clean energy for more than a decade.

Filed Under: Solar, Battery/Storage

Primary Sidebar

Sign up for our weekly newsletter

Emissions Counter

Renew Economy

RSS Energy News from Renew Economy

  • Cotton farm to start work on one of state’s biggest green hydrogen and ammonia projects
  • Permanent ban for energy efficiency company that falsified claims, misled regulator
  • Data centres will have to “ride through” grid faults, not trip off, under proposed new rules
  • “Mr Coal” and hater of the home battery rebate is the new leader of the National Party
  • Huge, forest-based wind farm signs up to deliver long-term affordable housing in regional NSW

RSS Electric Vehicle News from The Driven

  • Power network installs first of 100 power pole-mounted EV chargers
  • First Tesla Model Y L 6-seater EVs land in Australia
  • EV and home battery recycling could power a $6.9 billion a year industry in Australia
  • The fossil car industry in Norway is nearly dead. Who are selling the last ICE vehicles?
  • Green mining or diesel tax credit: Net Zero Commissioner says state can’t have both

Press Releases

  • Huge luxury Saudi resort goes 100pct renewables with one of world’s biggest batteries
  • How solar + storage can be a game-changer for people with disabilities

Footer

Technologies

  • Solar
  • Battery/Storage
  • Electric Vehicles
  • Energy Efficiency
  • Software/Gadgets
  • Other Renewables
  • Policy
  • Tariffs
  • Contact
  • Advertise with us
  • About One Step Off The Grid
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy

Copyright © 2026 · OneStep Genesis on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in