BlackRock has raised more than A$500m (鈧303m) from Australian and global institutional and sovereign co-investors to fund a battery energy storage project in Australia.

Australia鈥檚 green bank, the Clean Energy Finance Corporation (CEFC), has committed A$100m to the BlackRock fund which will help finance the Waratah Super Battery (WSB) project in New South Wales. Other investors include NGS Super, a not-for-profit fund aiming to achieve a carbon-neutral investment portfolio by 2030.

Funds managed by BlackRock鈥檚 Infrastructure team will co-invest alongside to finance the construction of the WSB, described as the largest standby network battery in the Southern Hemisphere.

The battery system will be built on the site of a decommissioned coal-fired power station on the state鈥檚 Central Coast.

The WSB forms part of the Sydney Ring Project, identified as a priority project in the Australian Energy Market Operator Integrated System Plan 2022, which maps the investment required to achieve a targetted 82% renewables by 2030.

Ian Learmonth, chief executive officer, CEFC, said: 鈥淟ong- and short-duration storage assets are critical to building an energy network fit for purpose in the 21st century, enabling Australia to capitalise on its abundant natural resources of wind and solar to decarbonise the grid.

鈥淏attery storage underpins a future balanced grid, ensuring that more clean energy can reach more consumers and provide network stability as coal continues to exit the network earlier than predicted.鈥

Monique Miller, CEFC鈥檚 renewables and sustainable finance CIO, said: 鈥淭he CEFC has co-invested with BlackRock on renewables since 2016, when Blackrock sponsored a number of projects under the ARENA Large Scale Solar PV Competitive Round, to which CEFC was a lender.鈥

Ben Squires, CIO of NGS Super, said the Waratah Super Battery was a critical piece of infrastructure for NSW鈥檚 energy future. 鈥淏y investing in this innovative project, we are driving positive environmental impact and generating long-term value for our members and stakeholders鈥.

Charlie Reid, BlackRock鈥檚 APAC co-head of climate infrastructure, said provision of the storage capacity needed to enable greater reliability and resilience to the power grid would help Australia achieve its renewable ambitions.

Andrew Landman, BlackRock鈥檚 head of Australasia, said the investment in WSB was a 鈥減rime example鈥 of how the private sector could partner with governments at all levels to support Australia鈥檚 orderly transition to a low-carbon world.

To read the latest edition of the latest 91传媒在线 magazine click here.