Australia opens funding round for solar supply chain

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From pv magazine Australia

ARENA's release of the AUD 1 billion Solar Sunshot program’s second funding round, worth AUD 150 million, aims to stimulate Australia’s ability to manufacture innovative deployment, balance of plant (BOP), and inputs to solar modules.

Round 2 funds will be allocated to support critical segments of the solar supply chain, including framing, solar glass, junction boxes and deployment technologies, while aiming to reduce the levelized cost of energy (LCOE) and improve efficiency across BOP, including automation, hardware, components, and system configurations.

Funding applicants are sought for projects that aim to advance and automate the manufacture of solar module components, including solar racking, tracking, and deployment technologies, to complement domestic module production.

ARENA CEO Darren Miller said Australia has the opportunity to build high-quality products across the PV supply chain.

“Although we have a very small production capability today, we have the skills, partnerships and raw materials to establish a strong base that can be built on over the next decade,” Miller said. “The Solar Sunshot program represents a pivotal opportunity for Australia to secure its place in the global solar industry.”

The second round will open for submissions on Sept. 23, 2025. Details on eligibility, funding mechanisms and timelines are available on the ARENA website.

Image: 5B

Round 2 – What’s not eligible?

Technologies that are not eligible for Round 2 include the production of solar modules and cells, ingots and wafer production, polysilicon production, any upstream activities relating to ingots, wafers or polysilicon, solar thermal technology, pilot scale manufacturing or the development of emerging technologies, solar testing facilities, recycling or end-of-life activities and feasibility studies and front-end engineering design (FEED) work.

Round 1

Round 1A, now closed, dedicated up to AUD 500 million to support module manufacturing, while Round 1B, with up to AUD 50 million available for feasibility and engineering studies, has been extended until November 2026.

Through these initial rounds, ARENA supported pioneering Australian companies, including up to AUD 46 million for Sydney-based solar technology company 5B to expand manufacturing capacity of its Maverick solar deployment system, AUD 34.5 million to South Australian-based solar panel manufacturer Tindo Solar to boost domestic production of PV, and AUD 11 million to three feasibility studies for upstream solar manufacturing.

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