SA Water picks Enerven for solar-plus-storage roll-out in South Australia

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Reddit
Email
SA Water's procurement manager Nichola Murphy and chief exec Roch Cheroux inspect solar PV panels at a site in Glenelg, South Australia. Image: SA Water.

SA Water, which delivers water to more than one-and-a-half million people in South Australia, has picked out local contractor Enerven to execute the roll-out of PV and battery storage across 70 of its facilities in the next 18 months.

Energy-Storage.news and PV Tech had reported on a plan by the water company to deploy around 152MW of solar PV and 35MWh of energy storage at its facilities in April 2018 as SA Water issued the plans and called for Expressions of Interest from prospective vendors.

This article requires Premium SubscriptionBasic (FREE) Subscription

Unlock unlimited access for 12 whole months of distinctive global analysis

Photovoltaics International is now included.

  • Regular insight and analysis of the industry’s biggest developments
  • In-depth interviews with the industry’s leading figures
  • Unlimited digital access to the PV Tech Power journal catalogue
  • Unlimited digital access to the Photovoltaics International journal catalogue
  • Access to more than 1,000 technical papers
  • Discounts on Solar Media’s portfolio of events, in-person and virtual

Or continue reading this article for free

This morning, SA Water emailed E-S.N to confirm the award of a framework contract agreement to Enerven, worth up to AU$304 million (US$217.49 million). The plan is now for the deployment of “approximately 154MW of new solar photovoltaic generation and 34MWh of energy storage, across around 70 of its sites over the next 18 months”.

It is thought that the successful installation of this new generation and flexibility capacity will net a return on investment in just six years, while SA Water has a plan in place to achieve ‘net zero electricity costs’ by its target year, 2020, to which the 152MW of PV and 34MWh of storage will make a sizeable contribution, the company claimed.

South Australia’s Minister for Environment and Water, David Speirs, praised the water body’s decision to lean on local labour and the local economy, with around 250 jobs expected to be supported by the 18-month rapid roll-out. The local aboriginal business community was also engaged for the project, providing apprentice training and opportunities within the local South Australian supply chain.

“The scale and complexity of this landmark program will deliver opportunities for local businesses across a range of sectors, drawing on South Australian excellence in everything from civil works through to security services, engineering and project management, to high-tech system automation,” Speirs said.

SA Water paid out around AU$62 million for electricity in its operational costs during 2017 and 2018. SA Water chief executive Roch Cheroux said the PV and storage would go a significant way towards helping the company “regain control over one of our single largest operational expenses”.

“There’s no doubt our ambitious goal will be a stretch, but we won’t lose sight of it,” Cheroux said.

Enerven is expected to get to work during the first six months of 2019 on the first sites. SA Water said the decision to award the contract to Enerven came after an “extensive, multi-stage public procurement process completed with oversight of an independently appointed probity advisor”. The company was created and launched as a subsidiary of SA Power Networks and was spun off as a rebrand of the latter’s Construction and Maintenance Services (CaMS) department.

The contractor business will conduct commercial, non-regulated business activities including transmission and distribution line work and developing new energy solutions such as the projects for SA Water. Enerven recently completed two phases of Bungala solar plant totalling 220MW, at a facility in South Australia which will eventually reach 300MW capacity when finished.

Read Next

Premium
June 3, 2025
In May 2025, utility-scale and rooftop solar PV dipped by 579GWh month-on-month in Australia’s National Electricity Market (NEM) to 2,861GWh.
June 2, 2025
Government-owned electricity retailer Jacana Energy has contracted 45MW of solar PV from utility-scale projects in the Northern Territory, Australia.
May 30, 2025
Tasmania’s George Town council approved plans for a 288MW solar PV power plant this week, which is being pursued in Australia by German renewable energy developer ib vogt.
May 28, 2025
The SEC has signed a deal to supply the Victoria government with 100% renewable energy from its portfolio in Australia.
May 28, 2025
QIC, one of Australia’s largest infrastructure fund managers, has completed an AU$2 billion refinancing and equity raise for Pacific Energy.
May 27, 2025
Fortescue Metals Group, an Australian mining giant, has submitted plans for its 644MW Turner River Solar Hub in Western Australia to the federal government’s Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation (EPBC) Act.

Subscribe to Newsletter

Upcoming Events

Solar Media Events
June 17, 2025
Napa, USA
Upcoming Webinars
June 30, 2025
10am PST / 6pm BST
Solar Media Events
July 1, 2025
London, UK
Solar Media Events
July 1, 2025
London, UK
Solar Media Events
September 16, 2025
Athens, Greece