
The company has submitted the development application to the Federal government under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation (EPBC) Act.
According to Squadron Energy, a range of battery technologies are under consideration, including lithium-ion, flow (vanadium, iron chloride, or zinc), and compressed air mechanical energy storage. The Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) will reveal the decision on which technology as well as the exact location of the storage facility, the planning document said.
Several approved energy storage projects are located within 50km of the project site. These include the 1.5GW Yanco Delta wind-plus-storage project, which Origin Energy acquired in April 2024. The site also includes plans for an 800MWh BESS.
Squadron Energy hopes to complete planning and approvals in 2026, with construction and commissioning to commence the following year. This phase will take around 24 months to complete.
Operation is anticipated to begin in 2028 or 2029, and the project’s operational lifespan is 30 years. At the end of this period, Squadron Energy will consider whether to re-permit, repower, or decommission the project.
Squadron Energy is also behind a 1,800MWh wind-plus-storage project in New South Wales, which the NSW Independent Planning Commission (IPCN) recently recommended for approval.
The site aims to couple a 700MW wind farm with a co-located 400MW/1,800MWh BESS. It is located west of Gulgong and northeast of Wellington in the Central-West Orana Renewable Energy Zone (REZ), which recently became the first to transition into the delivery phase.