Australiaâs 2GWh Kidston pumped hydro plant ends a 40âyear drought in longâduration storage, showing how repurposed mines and smart storage can firm a renewables grid.

Australiaâs New Pumped Hydro Era Starts at Kidston
Most countries talk about longâduration energy storage. Australia just switched one on.
In November 2025, the 2GWh Kidston Pumped Hydro Project in Queensland officially entered the National Electricity Market (NEM) â the first new pumped hydro energy storage (PHES) plant in the country in almost 40 years. For a grid racing to replace coal with renewables, thatâs not a symbolic milestone; itâs a structural shift.
This matters for anyone watching green technology, AIâenabled energy systems and the business case for largeâscale storage. Kidston isnât just another big asset; it shows how repurposed mining sites, smart market design and digital optimisation can work together to stabilise a renewablesâheavy grid.
In this post, Iâll break down what Kidston actually does, why longâduration storage is suddenly back on the agenda, how it fits with the boom in batteries, and what this means for developers, investors and energy users planning their own clean energy strategy.
What the Kidston pumped hydro plant actually delivers
Kidston adds 250MW of power and around 2GWh of storage to the Australian grid, using two converted mining pits from the former Kidston Gold Mine, 285km west of Townsville.
Hereâs the simple version of how it works:
- When thereâs too much cheap solar or wind in the system, Kidston runs as a load. It uses 250MW of power to pump water from the lower pit to the upper pit.
- When demand and prices spike, it runs as a generator, releasing water back down through turbines to produce up to 250MW.
AEMO now recognises four units in its Market Management System:
KIDSPHG1andKIDSPHG2â generation unitsKIDSPHL1andKIDSPHL2â pumping units
That dual identity â both generator and load â is what turns pumped hydro into a flexible grid asset rather than just a big power station.
From a services point of view, Kidston can provide:
- Energy arbitrage â buy low, sell high across multiple hours
- Frequency control â rapid up/down response to keep system frequency stable
- Voltage support â helping manage reactive power on the network
- Capacity â firm energy during evening peaks and heatwaves
For a grid thatâs retiring coal and adding variable renewables, that combination is gold.
Why longâduration storage is now nonânegotiable
The reality about highârenewables grids is simple: shortâduration batteries arenât enough on their own.
Lithiumâion batteries excel at:
- 1â4 hour energy shifting
- Fast frequency response
- Contingency events and system restart
They struggle economically when you ask them to cover 8, 10 or 12 hours of low wind or evening demand â especially as cycling requirements mount.
Pumped hydro, compressed air and other longâduration energy storage (LDES) technologies step into that gap. Kidston is a textbook example of why LDES is essential in Australia right now:
- Coal exits are accelerating. Several large coal units in the NEM are scheduled to close this decade. As that happens, the system loses not just energy, but inertia, spinning reserve and firm capacity.
- Solar is flooding the midday market. Midday prices routinely crash, with increasing periods of negative pricing in some regions. Thatâs perfect charging fuel for pumped hydro.
- Evening peaks are getting sharper. As airâconditioning loads rise through summer and rooftop solar drops away, the soâcalled âduck curveâ deepens. Multiâhour storage is the only sane way to flatten that.
Kidston can store around 2,000MWh â roughly ten times the storage capacity of a typical 200MW / 200MWh utility battery. You wouldnât use it for every fast, small correction on the grid; youâd use it for big, sustained imbalances that last all evening or all night.
From a green technology perspective, Iâd put it like this: batteries balance the minutes, LDES balances the days. Both are required for a stable, decarbonised system.
Turning a gold mine into a green technology asset
Hereâs the thing about Kidston that doesnât get enough attention: this is industrial recycling at grid scale.
Instead of building brandânew reservoirs and carving up untouched land, Genex Power has:
- Used two existing mine pits as upper and lower reservoirs
- Minimized new civil works by designing around existing topography
- Turned a legacy gold mine into a renewable energy hub, not a stranded liability
Thatâs exactly the kind of thinking the green technology sector needs: repurpose heavy industrial sites instead of walking away from them.
Environmental and social benefits
Repurposing mining infrastructure brings several advantages:
- Lower environmental footprint than a greenfield dam
- Faster approvals in many cases, because the disturbance already exists
- Regional jobs transition, shifting local economies from extraction to clean energy
Kidston also plugs into a broader hybrid vision â pairing pumped hydro with local solar and potentially wind, managed through advanced control software and market optimisation tools (this is where AI typically comes in, optimising when to pump and when to generate).
In practice, that turns a remote mine into a smart, dataâdriven energy node instead of a historical scar on the landscape.
The commercial model: longâterm certainty for longâlife assets
Pumped hydro projects are capitalâintensive and longâlived. They donât get built on merchant price risk alone.
Kidston works because of a 30âyear Binding Energy Storage Services Agreement with EnergyAustralia, which has dispatch rights and an option to acquire the project. That structure matters for two reasons:
- Revenue certainty for investors. Genex can finance a multiâdecade asset with clearer visibility on cash flows.
- Portfolio value for the retailer. EnergyAustralia gets reliable, controllable longâduration storage to back a growing renewable portfolio.
For developers, thereâs a clear lesson: LDES needs longâterm offtake or capacity contracts. The market simply doesnât price 40âyear optionality in a way that banks will accept.
Public finance as a catalyst
Kidston only reached financial close in 2022 thanks to support from ARENA and the Northern Australia Infrastructure Facility (NAIF). Thatâs exactly how public capital should work in green technology:
- Take early risk in firstâofâkind or firstâinâdecades projects
- Prove the technical and commercial model
- Crowd in private capital for the next wave
If youâre planning your own storage or hybrid renewable project, study this structure. Longâduration assets often sit at the intersection of:
- Government agencies hungry for decarbonisation outcomes
- Retailers needing firm capacity
- Investors looking for infrastructureâstyle returns
When those three align, big things get built.
Queenslandâs messy year: what Kidston tells us about storage strategy
Queensland is having a contradictory storage year, and Kidston sits right in the middle of that story.
On one hand:
- The state has backed the 5.7GWh Borumba pumped hydro project with AU$48 million in funding.
- Other big schemes like the 9.6GWh âBig Gâ are still chasing approvals.
On the other hand:
- The government cancelled the proposed PioneerâBurdekin project, once billed as the worldâs largest pumped hydro scheme, over cost and environmental concerns.
- The stateâs roadmap has been reâweighted toward shortâduration storage, targeting 4.3GW of batteryâstyle assets by 2030.
Hereâs my read: this isnât a rejection of pumped hydro, itâs an admission that not every valley needs a dam and not every LDES project pencils out.
A sensible storage strategy now looks like this:
- Shortâduration batteries (1â4 hours) near load centres and renewable hubs
- Selective pumped hydro or alternative LDES in geologically and socially suitable locations
- Smarter software and AI to orchestrate fleets of assets as a virtual portfolio
Kidston demonstrates what a good LDES project looks like: existing infrastructure, clear grid need, longâterm offtake. PioneerâBurdekin showed the other side: environmental pressure and cost blowouts can still kill megaâprojects.
How batteries and pumped hydro actually work together
The Kidston milestone landed at the same time as steady growth in battery energy storage systems (BESS) across Australia, like Potentia Energyâs 20MW/40MWh Quorn Park battery in New South Wales.
Some people frame this as a technology contest. Thatâs the wrong lens.
Quorn Parkâs 40MWh BESS, paired with a 98MW solar farm, will:
- Smooth solar output
- Support the local network
- Shift a few hours of energy into the evening
Kidstonâs 2,000MWh pumped hydro plant will:
- Absorb huge chunks of excess renewable generation over many hours
- Cover prolonged peaks and lowârenewables events
- Provide deep system security and capacity
The grid needs both:
- BESS for local flexibility and fast response
- Pumped hydro for regional and systemâwide balancing across long periods
From a green technology and AI perspective, the interesting action is in the software layer:
- Forecasting renewables and demand
- Optimising charge/discharge schedules
- Bidding multiple assets into energy and ancillary services markets
Weâre moving toward a world where pumped hydro stations, BESS, demand response and even EV fleets are orchestrated by AIâenabled platforms acting like virtual power plants. Kidston is one more powerful âplayerâ on that digital field.
What this means for developers, businesses and policymakers
Australiaâs 40âyear break in pumped hydro development is over. That carries clear signals for anyone involved in green technology.
For project developers
- Look hard at brownfield sites. Old mines, quarries and dams can become LDES assets with far better social licence than untouched valleys.
- Design for services, not just energy. Grid support (frequency, voltage, inertia) can be as valuable as arbitrage.
- Secure longâterm contracts early. Structure storage services agreements that align with retailer and grid needs.
For large energy users and businesses
- Expect more firmed renewables offerings as retailers use assets like Kidston to back corporate PPAs.
- Use this moment to audit your load profile â some processes can shift to match lowâcost renewable periods, cutting both cost and emissions.
- Consider participating in demand response or behindâtheâmeter storage that complements systemâlevel assets.
For policymakers and regulators
- Support a mix of storage durations, not a single âwinnerâ technology.
- Use grants, concessional finance or contractsâforâdifference to unlock firstâwave LDES projects that the private sector can then replicate.
- Streamline approvals for repurposed industrial sites, where environmental impact is genuinely lower.
Where green technology goes next after Kidston
Kidston shows that longâduration energy storage isnât theoretical anymore â itâs registering in the market, signing 30âyear contracts and supporting realâworld grids.
As more solar and wind connect through 2026 and beyond, the winners will be the regions and businesses that treat storage as infrastructure, not an afterthought. That means combining pumped hydro, batteries, digital control, and smarter demand in a coordinated way.
If youâre planning your own role in the energy transition â as a developer, investor, policymaker or large energy user â ask one question:
How will your strategy plug into a grid where Kidstonâstyle longâduration storage is the new normal, not the exception?