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Overview

  • Business, Government, Not-for-profit groups, Traditional Owner Corporations
  • Open, closing in 24 days

Round 2 applications are open, apply now

Round 2 of the 100 Neighbourhood Batteries Program offers up to $15 million in total funding, with up to $400,000 available per battery.

  • Multi-battery applications are welcome.
  • You must submit your application by 11 am on 29 October 2024.
  • If you apply for funding, you must complete your project by 31 August 2026.
  • We will only accept late applications if they don't affect the integrity of the application process.

If you need support

Apply now

Please choose the correct stream for your application. For more information on streams, see 'Projects that are eligible for funding' in the application guidelines on this page.

Stream 1: Delivering network and community benefits

Projects must implement at least one neighbourhood battery, prove quantified benefits for both the electricity network and local community, and provide at least a 30% cash contribution.

Apply for stream 1

Stream 2: Delivering community benefits

Projects must implement at least one neighbourhood battery, prove quantified benefits for the local community, and provide at least a 10% cash contribution.

Apply for stream 2

Stream 3: Delivering energy resilience

Projects must implement at least one energy back-up system that will be capable of continuing to supply power to a publicly accessible building during grid outages, prove quantified benefits for the local community, and provide at least 5% cash contribution.

Apply for stream 3

Using the grant platform

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  • To return to a saved draft application, login below:

Access your saved application

Assistance

For technical help with Grants Online, contact the grants online team.

Key dates

Applications open

Friday 30 August 2024

Applications close

11 am on Tuesday 29 October 2024

Questions close

5 pm on Tuesday 22 October 2024

Applicants notified and funding agreement executed

March 2025

Activities commence

April 2025

Activities completed and acquittal reports submitted

31 August 2026

Submitting your application

Make sure you complete the following checklist before you apply:

  • read these guidelines
  • check if you, or your organisation, is eligible for this grant funding
  • check if your project is eligible for this grant funding
  • check that you can follow all relevant laws and regulations to deliver your project
  • prepare and attach the appropriate supporting documents.

You must submit the following documents with your application.

Document name

Details

Project plan

No DEECA template available.

Your project plan must include an executive summary, budget, project objectives, activities, milestones, intended outcomes, and benefits.

Project budget (Excel, 33.4 KB)

You must use DEECA’s template.

Project delivery schedule (DOCX, 49.7 KB)

You can use your own template if:

  • your template contains all the same information as the DEECA template, as a minimum
  • is a comparable format.

Risk management log (DOCX, 63.3 KB)

You can use your own template if:

  • it contains all the same information, as a minimum
  • is a comparable format.

The risk register must include:

  • risks associated with the delivery of the project as funded by this grant
  • ongoing operational risks associated with the battery(s) operation.

Financial model

No DEECA template available.

Your financial model should include projections on the battery performance over time.

Important notes:

  • Please make sure your supporting documents are in an acceptable file format, such as Word, Excel, PDF, or JPEG.
  • The largest file size for each attachment is 10MB.
  • For any documents you cannot attach, email grantsinfo@deeca.vic.gov.au (don't forget to quote your application number).
  • Attach all documents to one email. Please zip your files if required.
  • We are unable to accept hard copy applications.
  • Please ensure you provide all supporting documents, otherwise your application may be deemed ineligible.
    Keep your attachments to requested information only. We cannot consider any extra information.
  • After applications close, we may ask that you provide additional evidence to clarify the claims/statements in your application.

Application guidelines

Eligible organisations

The following organisations can apply for funding:

  • public entities
  • private sector businesses and agencies
  • educational institutions
  • local government authorities
  • co-operatives
  • not for profit organisations.

Important: to be eligible for funding, applicants must be:

  • an incorporated body, co-operative or association (including business associations), and
  • financially solvent.

Lead organisation

If you’re a single entity or consortium, you must nominate a ‘lead organisation’ in your application. The role of the lead organisation is to:

  • endorse the application
  • verify any commitment of funds for the project
  • authorise to enter into a funding agreement with the State if successful.

Individuals are not eligible to apply as a lead organisation.

The lead organisation must:

  • have an Australian Business Number (ABN) and be registered for GST
  • be able to show at least 3 years’ operating history. This applies to the lead organisation or their parent company
  • be able to provide 3 years of financial reports (preferably audited). This applies to the lead organisation or their parent company.

Please note:

  • We will only fund the lead organisation for the duration of the project.
  • We may request that you audit and resubmit unaudited financial reports. This will happen during the assessment process.

Participating organisation

In your applications, you may also identify one or more project partners as a participating organisation.

A participating organisation means any company (or other entity) working with the lead organisation on, and/or providing funding to the recipient for the project, other than a government funder or a subcontractor.

Applications should clearly list the name and ABN of each participating organisation.

Who cannot apply?

The following organisations and individuals cannot apply for funding:

  • individuals
  • government departments and administrative offices.

Distribution network service providers are not eligible to apply for funding under Stream 3.

The following types of projects are eligible for funding:

Stream 1: Delivering network and community benefits

Funding (of up to $400,000 per battery) will be provided for projects that:

  • put in place one or more neighbourhood batteries (including installation and commissioning)
  • prove quantified benefits for both the electricity network and local community
  • include at least a 30% cash co-contribution of the requested grant amount
  • each battery must be a chemical battery of a minimum size 20kW/40kWh and maximum 5MW/20MWh
  • will complete the project delivery by 31 August 2026.

Stream 2: Delivering community benefits

Funding (of up to $400,000 per battery) will be provided for projects that:

  • put in place one or more neighbourhood batteries (including installation and commissioning)
  • prove quantified benefits for the local community
  • include at least a 10% cash co-contribution of the requested grant amount
  • each battery must be a chemical battery of a minimum size 20kW/40kWh and maximum 5MW/20MWh
  • will complete project delivery by 31 August 2026.

Stream 3: Delivering energy resilience

Funding (of up to $400,000 per back-up system) will be provided for projects that:

  • implement one or more energy back-up system/s that will be capable of continuing to supply power to one or more publicly accessible building/s during grid outages. Each energy back-up system must include a neighbourhood battery and may also include installation of any or all of the following: solar photovoltaics (PV), generator and management systems.
  • prove quantified benefits for the local community
  • include a cash co-contribution of at least 5% of the requested grant amount
  • each battery must be a chemical battery of a minimum size 20kW/40kWh and maximum 5MW/20MWh
  • will complete project delivery by 31 August 2026.

Applications with more than one battery

If you are seeking funding for more than one battery, please submit a single application. The combined funding sought must equal no more than the total funding eligible per battery.

Example: if you seek $120,000 funding for one battery project and $330,000 funding for another, you can make a single application for $450,000.

Co-contributions

You must have a cash co-contribution. This must meet the criteria of the relevant funding stream. You must secure:

  • a cash contribution towards the project, or
  • have evidence of a commitment to provide a cash contribution.

Extra funding can:

  • come from any source. This might include Commonwealth or Local Government grants
  • in part or as a whole, fund the mandatory cash co-contribution.

You must not use funding from other sources for the same items of eligible expenditure that will be funded by this grant program.

DEECA funding considerations

We reserve the right to re-allocate applications between streams. We will do this if an application better aligns with the eligibility of a different stream.

For instance, if DEECA considers that an application under Stream 2 primarily offers network benefits rather than community benefits, DEECA may choose to assess the application against the Stream 1 eligibility criteria, including higher cash co-contribution.

We will take a portfolio approach to selecting applications for funding. We will consider how each project contributes to the 100NB Program outcomes.

There might be situations where we may choose not to fund an otherwise suitable application. This might happen if the aims or outcomes of that application are the same as, or like:

  • a project that has been funded before, or
  • an application that we intend to fund under the 100NB Program or another funding source.

Such funding considerations may include, but are not limited to:

  • geographic spread
  • proponent diversity
  • beneficiary diversity
  • supply chain or market constraints to support installations in any given area.

Under Streams 1 and 2, projects with one or more of the following attributes will be given priority.

The project:

  • delivers benefits to diverse communities, low income and vulnerable households
  • delivers benefits to households with no access to solar PV generation. For example, renters and apartment-dwellers
  • adds to finished or scheduled works that increase electrification in local communities and/or at the battery location
  • demonstrates increased benefits for the local community. This is via a novel battery operational and/or commercial model
  • is in network areas with poor reliability. This is important for regional areas where a battery will increase energy reliability
  • is in constrained networks with solar export limits. The battery’s purpose is to reduce network constraints and increase local hosting capacity for solar
  • is within one or more of the 29 Local Government Areas committed to by the Victorian Government (see Appendix 1 in the Application Guidelines)
  • is within areas that have not previously received funding from this Program
  • delivers a greater number of batteries and faster deployment timelines (delivery within FY 25-26 is preferred).

Under Stream 3, projects with one or more of the following attributes will be given priority:

  • high incidence of historical electricity outages (both frequency and duration)
  • significant percentage of local population impacted by electricity outages
  • no or limited other local, publicly accessible, powered buildings available during electricity outages
  • located in network areas with poor reliability, particularly in regional areas where addition of a neighbourhood battery will increase energy reliability
  • vulnerability to extreme weather events likely to impact electricity infrastructure (e.g. storms, bushfires)
  • located within one or more of the 29 Local Government Areas (LGAs) committed to by the Victorian Government (see Appendix 1 in the Application Guidelines)
  • delivering a greater number of batteries and faster deployment timelines (delivery within FY 25-26 is preferred).

We will deem applications with any of the following activities ineligible for funding. The 100NB Program will not fund the following activities:

  • business as usual costs, including salaries and wages for personnel not employed directly on the project
  • routine or ongoing maintenance activities. This might include but is not limited to, operational and/or maintenance costs of a battery
  • land acquisition and related expenses
  • expenditure on other projects
  • projects that have already commenced construction
  • where duplicate services are in operation or planned for in a targeted community
  • the use of any new or nascent technologies that are lower than Technology Readiness Level (TRL) 9
  • feasibility studies or business cases
  • projects that do not include installation of a neighbourhood battery
  • projects that do not include integration of new or existing solar PV – applies to Stream 3 only
  • installation, operation or maintenance of generation technologies (e.g. solar panels, diesel generators) – applies to Streams 1 and 2 only
  • activities located outside the State of Victoria
  • projects that we have funded before for the same or similar activities or outcomes.

We check applications:

  1. for eligibility. This is to ensure that the applicant and their activities are eligible for funding
  2. for merit, using the criteria listed below.

We will give each of the following criterion a percentage weighting. This indicates its relative importance in the assessment process.

Important: your application should address all 4 criteria.

Criteria 1: Alignment with the intended outcomes of the 100 Neighbourhood Batteries Program

Weighting: 30%

Requirements:

You must describe—and quantify where possible—how your project will contribute to the intended outcomes of the program.

This includes:

  • benefits from local renewable energy and energy storage being passed on to consumers. This includes lowering household energy bills
  • increased energy reliability
  • increased energy resilience
  • reduced costs of network upgrades
  • communities feel they are contributing to Victoria’s energy transition
  • scaled up delivery of operational models for neighbourhood-scale batteries.

You must:

  • provide an assessment of how their battery will benefit the community and/or network over its lifetime
  • identify all assumptions underpinning their calculations.

Hint:

  1. Make sure you read the Priorities for funding section.
  2. Identify which of these priorities your project will address and how it will do this.

Criteria 2: Applicant capability and capacity

Weighting: 20%
Requirements:

You must:

  • list key project partners and their proposed roles and responsibilities. This is for both the duration of the project and the lifetime of the battery
  • provide details of the full-time equivalent (FTE) and remuneration for each role
  • describe the skills and experience of individual personnel and project partners
  • provide letter(s) of support from project partners. This can include Aboriginal businesses and Traditional Owners where appropriate
  • provide a letter of support from the DSNP, where you need a grid connection agreement. This should include, but is not limited to, the size and location(s) of the battery(s).

Criteria 3: Project business case

Weighting: 30%
Requirements:

You must describe the project design and deliverables including the provision of a detailed project plan containing:

  • summary of the project. To include a description of the proposed technology type, size and location of the battery(s)
  • project schedule outlining key milestones, delivery dates and dependencies
  • timeline for the project, including key milestones
  • a map showing the neighbourhood battery(s) installation site
  • status of grid connection applications (if applicable)
  • status of land access for the proposed project location(s) (if applicable)
  • details on the proposed operations and maintenance for the lifetime of the battery(s)
  • details on your proposed battery safety plan. This should include steps to prevent and manage fire risk
  • your plan to manage decommissioning and disposal of the battery(s) at the end of its operational life
  • work already undertaken with the community. This should include:
    • how you will engage with the community and Traditional Owners. This should include how your project provides local benefit
    • your notification of construction periods or any other relevant information
  • a completed risk management log. This should outline key risks and your approach manage and mitigate them
  • evidence of an intention to secure appropriate insurance for the project activities
  • a report that shows outcomes to further the development of neighbourhood batteries in Victoria
  • project budget using DEECA's budget template. This must include installation costs and show a minimum cash co-contribution of 30% for Stream 1, 10% for Stream 2, or 5% for Stream 3
  • evidence to support budget estimates
  • an outline of the source of funds required for the project. This includes in-kind and cash contributions secured from your organisation or other project partners
  • approach to managing potential cost overruns, and amount of contingency allowed
  • approach to using local content and suppliers. Your project should align with the principles of the Local Jobs First Policy and the Victorian Social Procurement Framework, including:
    • suppliers in Victoria
    • manufacturers in Australia
    • other businesses and organisations based and operating in Victoria (such as installation trades)
    • any purchasing, supplies or services from Aboriginal businesses and Traditional Owners Corporations.

Note: If you have several batteries and faster deployment times you will score higher on this criterion.

Criteria 4: Value for money

Weighting: 20%
Requirements:

You must provide evidence of a financial model that includes (at a minimum):

  • expected return on investment over the life of the battery(s)
  • expected revenues over the life of the battery(s). This should include the source of these revenue projections
  • expected costs over the lifetime of the battery(s). This should have a clear breakdown of cost categories
  • calculation of the battery(s) capital cost per kilowatt hour
  • calculation of the total project cost per kilowatt hour of total installed battery(s)
  • clear identification of all assumptions underpinning your model.

DEECA provides:

  • no guarantee that we will fund any projects applied for
  • no undertaking on the amount of individual or total grant monies that will be provided.

Funding agreements

Successful applicants must enter into a funding agreement with DEECA.

We use the 100 Neighbourhood Batteries Round 1 Funding agreement template.

Please note: this funding agreement template is subject to change.

You must sign the funding agreements within one month of notification of a successful grant application. Failure to sign within this timeframe may result in loss of grant funding.

You must not use funding for political campaigning or advocacy for political parties.

 

Legislative and regulatory requirements

In delivering the activity you must follow all relevant Commonwealth and state/territory legislations and regulations. These include but are not limited to:

  • Privacy Act 1988 (Cth)
  • Freedom of Information Act 1982 (Vic)
  • Occupational Health and Safety Act 2004  
  • Planning and Environment Act 1987
  • Climate Change Act 2017
  • Electricity Safety Act 1998
  • National Electricity (Victoria) Act 2005
  • Electricity Industry Act 2000.

Tax implications

On any tax implications arising from grant funding, you should consult:

  • the Australian Taxation Office, or
  • seek professional advice.

We will offer funding as a GST exclusive amount.

For organisations with an ABN who are GST registered, the payment will include GST.

Recipients are responsible for determining their tax liabilities for grant payments. Grants provided by DEECA are classified as income and tax may be payable by recipients.

You are responsible to investigate your own tax structure and treatment.

Acknowledging the Victorian Government’s support

Successful applicants must:

Payments

We will make payments as long as:

  • the funding agreement has been signed by both parties
  • you provide reports as required, or (as agreed by us) show activity is progressing as expected
  • you continue to meet other terms and conditions of the funding.

Monitoring

You must monitor and report on your project as outlined in the funding agreement. This may include progress reports, site inspections, completion reports and acquittal documentation.

You are responsible for the delivery of the project. This includes any project cost overruns should they occur.

We reserve the right to cancel the grant and, if applicable, recoup payments where you:

  • delay a project for an unreasonable length of time
  • make changes to the scope of your project, without approval, after we have approved funding, or
  • fail to deliver a project.

Cost

We are not liable for any costs, expenses, losses, claims or damages that you may incur when applying for grant funding. This includes:

  • in preparing or submitting an application
  • providing further information to DEECA, or
  • participating in negotiations with DEECA.

Probity for application procedures

For any person involved in the application process you or your associates must not:

  • offer them any incentive, or
  • attempt to influence them.

This also applies to awarding any later contract.

If we determine that you or any of your associates have violated this condition, we may disqualify you from further consideration. This is at DEECA’s absolute discretion.

By submitting an application, you consent for DEECA to perform probity and financial checks on you or your associates.

You agree, if requested by DEECA, to seek consent from individuals to allow such checks.

Privacy

We will collect your personal information to administer your grant application. We may also inform Members of Parliament of successful applications.

We may also disclose your personal information to external experts. This may include members of assessment panels, or other Government departments. We may disclose this information for assessment, reporting, advice, comment or for discussions about alternative or collaborative grant funding opportunities.

If you intend to include a third party’s personal information in your application, please ensure they know the contents of this privacy statement.

We will collect, hold, manage, use, disclose or transfer your personal information or a third party under the provisions of the Privacy and Data Protection Act 2014 and other applicable laws.

DEECA is committed to protecting the privacy of personal information. DEECA’s Privacy Policy.

You can request access to the information about you held by DEECA by writing to:

After you submit your application

After you submit your application, you will receive an application number. Please quote this number in all communications with us about your application.

Notification of successful applicants

We will notify you about your application in writing following the assessment process:

  • All decisions are final and are not subject to further review.
  • Unsuccessful applicants can ask for feedback on their application.

Page last updated: 25/09/24