The Future Battery Industries Cooperative Research Centre (FBICRC) has announced Australia’s first sodium-sulfur NAS battery has been installed at the IGO Nova nickel-copper-cobalt mine site.
The 250kW/1.45MWh Battery Energy Storage System (BESS) demonstration unit will provide long-duration storage.
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FBICRC CEO Shannon O’Rourke said, “The installation of Australia’s first NAS battery will help to accelerate our clean energy future. The NAS® battery technology is mature and has been successfully installed and operated at over 250 sites worldwide over the past 20 years.
“These field deployments help build market confidence, train our workforce and build capability in the contracting community. We thank both BASF and IGO for their generous commitment to cooperative research, which enables benefits to flow to Australia as a whole.”
IGO acting CEO Matt Dusci said, “IGO is committed to prioritising research and development to accelerate IGO and the broader mining industry’s response to climate change. The BASF NAS battery trial at our Nova Operation is an important way to field test the suitability of this unique technology in a mining environment and how this will contribute to a clean energy future.”
BASF Australia and New Zealand chair and managing director David Hawkins said, “We are proud to be a part of the first NAS battery installation in Australia. Globally, BASF has committed to net zero emissions by 2050 and central to this long-term transition is the use of new technologies. We look forward to working with developers and end-users to provide batteries to support decarbonisation, electrification, grid stability and large-scale renewable energy integration.”
NAS batteries that are designed for long duration energy storage applications (six to eight hours or more), have the ability to shift large quantities of energy into periods of low renewable generation.
More than 250 NAS battery sites across the world are already in operation, with a total storage capacity of approximately 5.0GWh.
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Battery performance will be assessed by the QUT operated National Battery Testing Centre, and the University of Western Australia.
Allset Energy, BASF’s engineering, procurement and construction partner, was the lead contractor in delivering the design, construction and commissioning.