How Fortescue's Renewable Grid Survived a Bushfire Transmission Failure Without Fossil Fuels
Introduction
When a bushfire knocked out a critical transmission line supplying Fortescue's mining operations in Western Australia, conventional wisdom said the grid would collapse without spinning machines. But Fortescue's green grid—powered entirely by solar and batteries—not only rode through the fault but did so without firing up a single fossil fuel generator. This real-world demonstration proves that a 100% renewable grid, with proper design and control systems, can handle even severe transmission disturbances. In this guide, we'll walk through the key elements that made this feat possible, from the underlying infrastructure to the real-time response, so you can understand how a modern renewable grid can achieve what was once thought impossible.

What You Need
- A large-scale solar farm (e.g., 40+ MW capacity) with grid-forming inverters
- Battery energy storage system (e.g., 20+ MWh) capable of fast frequency response
- Advanced grid-forming inverter controllers that can emulate synchronous inertia
- Communication and monitoring systems for real-time grid status
- Automatic load shedding or demand response protocols (optional but helpful)
- Fault detection and protection relays to isolate disturbances
Numbered Steps
Step 1: Establish a high-penetration renewable microgrid
Fortescue's system at the Chichester mining hub relies on a solar farm (around 60 MW) paired with a battery storage system (approximately 20 MW/20 MWh). The key is to use grid-forming inverters rather than grid-following ones. Unlike conventional inverters that rely on an existing grid voltage to synchronize, grid-forming inverters set the voltage and frequency themselves—acting as the grid's anchor. Install these inverters at the solar farm and battery connection points, configured to operate in island mode or grid-connected mode seamlessly.
Step 2: Configure the battery to provide synthetic inertia
Traditional grids rely on spinning turbines (coal, gas, hydro) that have rotating mass—inertia—to slow down frequency changes. In a renewable-only grid, that inertia is missing. Fortescue's battery system was programmed to virtually mimic inertia by using its power electronics to respond to frequency deviations instantaneously. Set your battery's inverter control to inject or absorb real power proportional to the rate of change of frequency (RoCoF). This synthetic inertia response happens within milliseconds, faster than any spinning reserve.
Step 3: Implement fast frequency control and voltage regulation
During normal operation, the battery operates as a grid-forming unit that holds frequency at 50 Hz (or 60 Hz) and voltage within limits. When a transmission fault occurs—like the bushfire line tripping—the battery senses the sudden change and automatically ramps up or down its power output. In Fortescue's case, the battery responded to a 50 MW export line loss within 50 milliseconds, adjusting its output from about 5 MW to over 30 MW in seconds. Ensure your energy management system (EMS) has fast-acting loops with low-latency measurements (phasor measurement units work best).
Step 4: Coordinate solar and battery dispatch in real time
Fortescue's solar farm also contributes to stability, but because solar output depends on sunlight, the battery handles the heavy lifting during transients. The system uses a centralized controller that monitors solar irradiance, battery state of charge, and grid conditions. In the event of a transmission trip, the controller can temporarily curtail solar generation to prevent over-generation, or dispatch battery reserves to fill the gap. Program your controller to anticipate the loss of a transmission line and pre-position resources (e.g., keep battery headroom) so that response is immediate.

Step 5: Test with simulated faults and validate ride-through
Before the actual bushfire incident, Fortescue conducted rigorous testing. They simulated transmission outages, load changes, and line trips while measuring frequency, voltage, and power flows. Document the performance metrics: maximum frequency deviation (e.g., < 1 Hz), settling time (e.g., < 5 seconds), and any load shedding events. Use the test results to tune control parameters and refine protection settings. This step is crucial to build confidence that the system can handle real disturbances without relying on backup diesel generators.
Step 6: Monitor during real faults—and resist the urge to start fossil generators
On the day the bushfire caused a transmission line trip, Fortescue’s operators were tempted to start up their standby diesel or gas generators—standard procedure in most mining grids. However, the green grid proved stable. The key is to trust the controls. In practice, have a clear protocol: if the renewable grid rides through a fault without violating operational limits, do not intervene. Fortescue’s team held off on fossil backup and the system recovered autonomously within seconds. This step requires operator training and a strong commitment to zero-carbon operations.
Tips for Success
- Start small: If you’re building a renewable microgrid, first test with a single solar farm and battery before scaling up. Fortescue’s Chichester system is part of a larger network, but initial validation came from smaller pilot projects.
- Invest in high-quality power electronics: Grid-forming inverters are more expensive than grid-following ones, but they are non-negotiable for a fully renewable grid that must survive transmission faults.
- Conduct frequent black start drills: A grid-forming system should also be able to restart from scratch. Fortescue has demonstrated that ability as well—practice it.
- Combine with demand-side management: Load shedding or curtailment of non-essential loads can provide an additional buffer during severe disturbances.
- Document everything: The success of Fortescue’s green grid is now a case study; share your own data to build industry confidence in renewable-only grids.
- Consider hybrid storage: Adding a small amount of supercapacitors or flywheels could further improve very fast frequency response, though batteries alone worked in this instance.
The Fortescue incident proves that a 100% renewable grid can not only match but exceed the reliability of conventional fossil-based grids—at least for this type of transmission failure. With careful design, robust controls, and a commitment to staying green, the impossible becomes operational reality.
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