UK firms make international expansion moves with residential solar-plus-battery offerings

By Molly Lempriere, Liam Stoker
November 18, 2020
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Social Energy promo picture for its Australia launch, featuring Duracell’s Energy Bank 2 home energy storage system (HESS). Image: Social Energy.

Two UK-based firms, energy supplier OVO Energy and integrated home battery storage provider Social Energy, have expanded into international markets in Spain and in Australia respectively.

OVO Energy has enlisted Germany-headquartered battery storage provider sonnen to launch a home solar-storage offering in Spain with the aim of easing grid constraints. Meanwhile, Social Energy is offering a green energy package to homeowners using its exclusive Duracell-branded home solar battery system in Australia.

OVO will offer its customers in Spain domestic solar installs to be paired with batteries from Shell-owned sonnen and underpin their use via an energy management platform produced by Kaluza, OVO’s in-house energy technology company. Local solar installation business Webatt has been appointed install partner for the project.

The offering will allow OVO customers to generate, store and either use or export their own power. OVO said it intended to make full use of Spain’s ‘auto-consumo’ policy, which allows owners of home solar systems to sell excess energy to local distribution grids.

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OVO talked up the potential for systems to reduce grid constraints in the country by essentially reducing power demand during peak times, while also helping customers reduce their dependence on the grid.

Sara Wood, CEO at Kaluza, said integrating the company’s platform with batteries from sonnen would empower consumers while “creating a more resilient energy system” at the same time. OVO is now the second largest energy supplier in the UK, while Kaluza’s intelligent energy management platform has been used to solve grid challenges in its home market.

OVO Energy / sonnen story by Liam Stoker, first published on PV Tech.

Australian homeowners could save money via AI platform and VPP technology, company claims

Similarly to Kaluza’s management platform, Social Energy’s battery storage systems in the UK are aggregated to intelligently provide flexibility to local networks.

Social Energy’s solar and storage systems in Australia will be managed by the company’s artificial intelligence platform and virtual power plant (VPP) technology, saving Australian customers as much as AU$2,182 (US$1,598) in the first year, the company claimed.

Social Energy is offering customers who purchase and install solar panels and a battery a feed-in tariff of 40c per kWh. This it says is unseen for almost a decade in the country, with customers set to receive this export tariff for the first 300kWh they export each quarter.

Following this there will be a secondary standard feed-in tariff, that is still higher than the average in the regions of New South Wales, South Australia and Queensland where the customer proposition is being launched.

Social Energy has partnered with Duracell for the expansion, offering customers access to the lithium-ion Duracell Energy Bank 2.

Another provider, SolaX, is also set to provide battery technology, with more battery suppliers to follow in early 2021.

The cost of the system, combining solar panels, a battery and Social Energy install is approximately AU$12,000 for a 6.6kWp tier 1 solar installation and an 11.6kWh SolaX battery system, connected with a Social Energy Hub. There are finance packages and government grants available additionally, to help homeowners who may be interested.

Australia is seeing long-term sustainable growth in the solar sector, with around 23,000 new residential installations each month, quickly expanding the 2.5 million homes that already have a solar system.

Social Energy story by Molly Lempriere, first published on Current± and Solar Power Portal.

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As we move into 2026, Australia is seeing real movement in emerging as a global ‘green’ superpower, with energy storage at the heart of this. This Summit will explore in-depth the ‘exponential growth of a unique market’, providing a meeting place for investors and developers’ appetite to do business. The second edition will shine a greater spotlight on behind-the-meter developments, with the distribution network being responsible for a large capacity of total energy storage in Australia. Understanding connection issues, the urgency of transitioning to net zero, optimal financial structures, and the industry developments in 2026 and beyond.

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