FRV Australia and Genesis Joint Venture begin the construction of the biggest solar farm in New Zealand
- FRV Australia and its joint venture partner, Genesis Energy, have begun the construction of the largest solar farm in New Zealand after reaching financial close in December 2023.
- The 63 MW solar farm, once operational by the end of 2024, will power the equivalent of nearly 13,000 houses.
- FRV Australia has expanded its activities to New Zealand in 2021 and the joint venture partners are also assessing three North Island sites with a combined capacity of up to 400 MW.
Sydney, 24th April 2024
FRV Australia, a leading developer of sustainable energy solutions, and part of Abdul Latif Jameel Energy, OMERS and its joint venture (JV) partner Genesis Energy, a New Zealand publicly listed electricity generation company, have begun the construction of the largest solar farm in New Zealand after reaching financial close in December 2023
This 63 MW solar farm is located one hour’s drive from Christchurch, at Lauriston on the Canterbury Plains. The plant is on a 93-hectare site and, once operational, will power the equivalent of nearly 13,000 houses. It is expected to create more than 50 jobs during the construction phase and employ up to three full-time staff when operational. The expected construction costs are approximately $104 million. The site is expected to be generating electricity by the end of 2024. The joint venture also signed a 10-year power purchase agreement (PPA) with Genesis Energy which will take all the renewable energy from the site.
A sod-turning ceremony on site on 23 April saw Genesis Chief Executive Malcolm Johns and FRV Australia CEO Carlo Frigerio launch construction. Also in attendance were Ashburton Mayor Neil Brown, the Chief Executive of EA Networks, Onno Mulder, and the General Manager of construction partner BEON, Kieren Lewis.
The joint venture partners are also assessing three North Island sites with a combined capacity of up to 400 MW as Genesis focuses on moving to around 95% renewable generation by 2035. “Solar energy from sites like Lauriston will also enable Genesis to reduce our generation emissions as we move to become net zero by 2040,” Johns said.
FRV Australia and Genesis Energy formed a joint venture in late 2021. The joint venture’s target development of 500 MW of solar capacity is expected to generate about 750 GWh pa – enough to power 100,000 households or 185,000 EVs per year.
The debt funding is provided by Bank of New Zealand (BNZ) and MUFG Bank Ltd (MUFG). The joint venture has selected Beon to carry out the construction of the project, with initial works already underway. FRV Australia and Beon have a successful history delivering solar farms together in Australia. FRV Australia is co-owned by Canadian pension fund and infrastructure investor OMERS.
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