Researchers at the University of New South Wales (UNSW) and installer Aussie Solar Batteries will develop and test AI-driven energy management platforms to optimize solar and battery systems and support virtual power plant (VPP) deployment.
UNSW researchers have agreed to collaborate with Sydney-based installer Aussie Solar Batteries Group to design, develop and test AI-driven energy management platforms capable of optimizing solar and battery systems.
The aim is to test new technologies under real operating conditions, improving grid stability, lowering costs and unlocking greater value from distributed energy assets.
It will focus on forecasting, demand-side management, optimization algorithms and digital-twin modeling to enable smarter coordination of distributed energy resources and more efficient VPP deployment.
Aussie Solar Batteries CEO Steven Yu said the partnership bridges a gap between academic innovation and practical energy solutions.
“This collaboration allows us to take world-class research out of the lab and apply it directly in real homes and businesses,” Yu said. “By combining UNSW’s AI and energy expertise with our large-scale deployment capability, we can accelerate smarter, more efficient solar and battery networks across Australia.”
The collaboration centers on a research and commercialization project known as “AI-Enabled Smart Energy Hub for Virtual Power Plant (VPP) Deployment in Residential and Commercial Solar Networks.”
It is part of the Australian government-funded Trailblazer for Recycling and Clean Energy (TRaCE) initiative, led by UNSW in partnership with the University of Newcastle. It is designed to fast-track the commercial readiness of advanced clean-energy technologies.
“This project is about closing that gap and fast-tracking solutions that improve reliability, reduce energy costs and unlock the full potential of virtual power plants,” Yu said.
The project is scheduled to run until the end of 2026. Both parties will work under the TRaCE framework to support future commercialization pathways, which will occur in line with Commonwealth funding requirements, ensuring the benefits of new technology are retained within Australia, said Aussie Solar Batteries.
Yu claimed that smarter batteries and AI-driven energy systems are the future of the grid.
“It is about time our energy solutions have the capability and intelligence to respond and calibrate to the lifestyle and power needs of households and businesses to ensure we are achieving sensible consumption and the lowest costs possible,” Yu added. “Our groundbreaking project will enable this.”
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