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The Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA), together with the Australian Government, will provide remote communities from the Tiwi Islands to the South Australian border with connection to solar power as the next phase of the $59 million Solar Energy Transformation Program (SETuP) project.

ARENA and the Australian Government previously announced $31.5 million in funding towards SETuP, jointly funded by the Northern Territory (NT) Government and managed by Power and Water Corporation (PWC).

Tranche Two, which commenced construction in June 2018 and is expected to be completed by November of the same year, will see 5.6MW of solar PV rolled out to a further 17 communities across the Territory from Finke near the South Australian border to the Tiwi Islands.

Solar PV will be integrated with diesel generators at 15 sites including a 1MW solar system at the Tiwi Island community of Wurrumiyanga which will ultimately supply electricity to three communities on Bathurst and Melville Islands, via an interconnection project.

On completion of Tranche Two, the SETuP program will provide 10MW of solar PV to 28 remote off-grid communities across the NT.

Tranche One involved last year, successfully integrating 3.325MW of solar PV into diesel power systems in an initial 10 remote Indigenous communities.

In April, alongside Tranche One, Daly River also became the first Northern Territory remote community to pilot being partially powered by solar and battery, as a 2MWh lithium-ion battery with a 0.8MW peak output was installed alongside 3,200 solar panels. Daly River, with 50 per cent of its energy from solar, is a demonstration of what is possible for the other communities to achieve in coming years.

ARENA CEO Ivor Frischknecht said Tranche Two would complete the roll out of this ambitious project to bring renewable energy to off-grid and off-shore communities.

“As the largest roll out of solar PV to remote communities, this is a significant achievement that is four years in the making and one that ARENA is extremely proud to be supporting,” Mr Frischknecht said.

“This project will reduce the reliance on diesel which is costly and subject to price volatility, create job opportunities in remote communities and provide renewable energy which can be expanded in the future. Each community will be operationally and technically ready to plug in more solar and storage as costs of renewable technologies fall. Over time, this could lead to a very high percentage renewable power, driven by the lower cost of renewable energy,” he said.

“This project demonstrates how delivery of cost-effective, renewable energy may be employed to provide reliable power to remote communities, where both energy demand and costs are high,” said Power and Water Chief Executive Michael Thomson.

“Reducing our reliance on diesel fuel in remote locations makes economic and environmental sense. As these hybrid systems combine existing Power and Water assets with clean technologies, we are able to ensure service remains consistent while making a 15 per cent saving on diesel fuel.”

Lauren ‘LJ’ Butler is the Assistant Editor of Utility magazine and has been part of the team at Monkey Media since 2018.

After completing a Bachelor of Media, Communications and Professional Writing at the University of Wollongong in 2014, and prior to writing about the utility sector, LJ worked as a Journalist and Sub Editor across the horticulture, hardware, power equipment, construction and accommodation industries with publishers such as Glenvale Publications, Multimedia Publishing and Bean Media Group.

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