Inner West Community Battery Meet'n'greet session
2:00pm
Agenda
Meet'n'Greet session
Engagement with community groups, Ausgrid, Inner West Council's Green Living Centre
2:30pm
Formal proceedings
Welcome to Country – Aunty Deb Lennis
Welcome -Mayor Darcy Byrne, Inner West Council
Introductory comments – Dr Margaret Vickers, Inner West Community Batteries
3:00pm Presentation - Ausgrid’s community battery program
Alan Luc, Community Battery Systems Lead
Sophia Ryan, Stakeholder Manager Energy Transition & Strategy
3:20pm Discussion 4:00pm Afternoon Tea
Community Batteries
Why we need them
What they can do for us
Our
energy system
is undergoing a revolution
Power now comes from multiple sources –including “wild card” rooftop solar
Utility - scale infrastructure
• Slow to construct
• Expensive
• NIMBY issues
Community level infrastructure
Surplus power from local rooftop solar is harvested. It is -
Stored in community batteries, Shared by all in the local network, & Saved rather then curtailed
One simplified model
Suggests ways that power flows between household solar and the grid, when a battery is installed
Surplus power in the battery can also be transferred to the highvoltage lines
Community Batteries
Alan Luc Sophia RyanDistribution network is the “sweet spot” for battery location
Sweet spot where ability to provide value along the supply chain and economies of scale are high
Community Battery Concept
Distribution Household
Behind the meter battery
Community battery
Sub-transmission
Utility scale battery (medium)
Transmission
Utility scale battery (large)
Ausgrid’s Community Battery Trial
Phase 1 tests network and customer use cases
Phase 2 integrates market use cases
Phase 3 transition to a sustainable model
Ausgrid’s Community Battery trial is a flagship project within our network innovation program and was co-designed with the Network Innovation Advisory Committee (NIAC).
Key learnings from our community battery trial
• Community engagement: proactive upfront engagement with councils and communities and considering their feedback in our design is key
• Safety and clearance: batteries must be accessible and have a certain clearance zone around the immediate vicinity of the battery
• Road traffic: where possible, our preference is to locate the battery in low-traffic zones or install barriers to minimise risks of vehicle collisions. We also take care to ensure the battery does not obscure vehicular traffic view
• Noise: we maintain ambient battery noise levels below the thresholds set by the Environmental Protection Agency
• Environmental and heritage considerations: we prefer to minimise vegetation clearance, consider water ingress risks and assess sites for potential cultural or heritage significance
• Network configuration: where possible, minimal upgrades to the network to connect the battery are preferred. The intention is to install batteries to mitigate the need for traditional network augmentation
• Network support: given the above considerations are met, we select locations where batteries provide maximum network support –selecting initial regions for assessment based on likely network benefits (e.g. where the battery can avoid or delay future network upgrades) helps to optimise this
• Storage as a service: this is not a scalable model yet due to current
Community
Noise Water ingress Community consultationEmpowering communities through community batteries
• The Federal Government has committed $224.3 million to help install up to 400 Community Batteries across the country.
• Funding is being released in three streams:
• Stream 1 (56 eligible locations) and Stream 2 (2 eligible locations), submissions opened 31 January 2023 and closed 24 February 2023.
• Grant applications submitted 24 February 2023.
• We applied for the six eligible locations within Ausgrid’s footprint – Bondi/Bondi Beach, Breakfast Point/Cabarita, Cammeray, Narara, Warriewood, North Epping.
• Stream 3 administered by Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA).
• Public webinar and round 1 expression of interest were released in April 2023. EOIs close 30 June 2023.
• Ausgrid is working through a strategy to support the delivery of more community batteries in our network area.
Narara community battery eventDCCEEW grant timeline and Ausgrid community engagement timeline
Community battery engagement
Purpose Test location, wrap design, benefits and online information hub with local residents around the battery site
Postcar d Invited local residents to onsite ‘drop-in’ session (approx 200m around the battery site)
Survey 1. Are you comfortable with Mitchell Park as the preferred location for the community battery project?
2. We are exploring the idea of wrapping the battery in a First Nations artwork that will reflect the rich heritage of the area. Do you have any feedback on this proposed design?
3. What benefits from community batteries are you most interested in? (rank from most important to least important)
• Allows more rooftop solar to be installed in your local area
• More solar energy will be kept locally and shared within your local community
• Improves the network voltage and allows more rooftop solar to be exported to the grid
• Supporting more connections, such as Electric Vehicle charging
4. What information would you like to see in the information hub? (multiple choice)
• Local emissions data
• Local solar consumption
• Hosting capacity
• Other (free text field)
5. Do you have any other questions or feedback for this project?
Community batteries offer shared benefits
• Allows more rooftop solar and electric devices, such as electric vehicle chargers to be connected.
• Strengthens the grid reducing the need to limit (curtail) solar exports and help customers maximise their solar investment.
• Helps share more solar within the local area, including to non-solar households.
• Creates a positive impact on wholesale electricity prices that could eventually flow through to reduced retail customer offers.
• Helps to regulate voltage on the network and improves network quality in the local area.
• Offers a flexible alternative to traditional poles and wires investment and helps lower network costs.
• Access to an online information hub where the community can see how much energy was stored and used daily.
During the day, excess solar is stored in the battery via the grid
o Stored energy can be drawn from the grid during high energy periods or the evening
Communities can learn about the battery and how it operates daily
Community Batteries
Visit the links below for more information.
Ausgrid
• https://www.ausgrid.com.au/In-your-community/Community-Batteries
• https://yoursay.ausgrid.com.au/
Federal Grants
• https://business.gov.au/grants-and-programs/community-batteries-for-household-solar-stream-1
• https://arena.gov.au/funding/community-batteries-round-1/
Discussion
3:20pm Moderated by Mayor Darcy Byrne
Alan Luc, Community Battery Systems Lead
Sophia Ryan, Stakeholder Manager Energy Transition & Strategy
Dr Margaret Vickers, Inner West Community Batteries