The Albanese and Cook Labor Governments are accelerating Western Australia’s strong momentum towards a cheaper, cleaner, and more secure energy future with the construction of 18 more community batteries now underway.
Installed by Western Power, the batteries will provide a combined 6.6 megawatts of storage capacity, helping harness WA’s huge rooftop solar generation, and redeploying the energy during the evening peak when demand increases.
Once online by mid-2027, the 13 low-voltage and 5 medium-voltage batteries will help to bring down systemwide costs, reduce emissions, and provide improved grid stability.
Selected in consultation with local government and residents, the 13 battery locations across Perth and 5 in Bunbury were chosen to help manage the network in areas with high rooftop solar uptake.
Around 130 households will be connected into each metropolitan battery, with about 3,600 households connected across the five larger Bunbury sites.
Through Round 1 of the Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA) Community Battery program, the Albanese Government has provided $9.34 million towards the $25 million total project cost.
The Albanese Government has already deployed five community batteries across Perth – in Coogee, Bayswater, Stratton, Kinross and Port Kennedy – through the Community Batteries for Household Solar program. Under our Cheaper Home Batteries Program, more than 45,000 Western Australian households and small businesses have installed batteries.
The Albanese Government is also supporting WA’s energy transition through the Capacity Investment Scheme (CIS), with the latest WA tender backing 1.9 gigawatts of cheaper, cleaner renewable generation and 482 megawatts of battery storage as part of 10 new projects set to be built across regional WA.
Two big batteries in Muchea and Merredin are already under construction as part of CIS Tender 2, and three new batteries and one solar-battery hybrid project were awarded in CIS Tenders 5 and 6 last month.
