The momentum is largely fueled by the federal government’s Capacity Investment Scheme. In the most recent tender, officials awarded 19 projects capable of delivering 7.8 gigawatts of generation alongside 7.9 gigawatt-hours of battery storage. Data from the Australian Energy Market Operator confirms this shift is already influencing the grid, with renewables providing 46.5% of generation during the first quarter of 2026. Batteries, in particular, are emerging as a critical price-setting technology, frequently displacing gas and hydro during peak evening hours.
Despite this growth, industry experts caution that the transition faces significant hurdles. The Clean Energy Council reported a 46% slump in financial commitments for new generation in 2025, with only 2.3 gigawatts reaching final investment decisions. CEO Jackie Trad highlighted that planning bottlenecks, long connection queues, and shifting contract economics threaten to stall progress. While the pipeline of probable projects remains robust, the gap between government-tendered ambition and actual financial closing remains a central challenge for the sector.

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