- La Caisse to invest CAD 1 billion (AUD 1.1 billion) to acquire Edify Energy and fund new solar-plus-storage projects.
- Two hybrid projects (900 MW / 3,600 MWh) already contracted with Rio Tinto and the Commonwealth of Australia.
- Edify’s 11 GW pipeline positions it as a central player in Australia’s grid decarbonization strategy.
A New Phase for Australia’s Renewable Sector
La Caisse, the Canadian investment group formerly known as CDPQ, has reached binding agreements to acquire Edify Energy, one of Australia’s leading renewable energy and battery storage developers. The transaction, expected to total about CAD 1 billion (AUD 1.1 billion) including new equity capital, marks one of the largest foreign investments in Australia’s clean energy sector this year.
The deal provides Edify with the financial scale to accelerate its build-out of integrated solar and battery systems, a segment viewed as critical to ensuring grid stability as coal exits the energy mix. The acquisition also signals continued confidence from global investors in Australia’s renewable pipeline despite policy uncertainty in some regions.
Financing Major Hybrid Projects
La Caisse’s investment will fund Edify’s immediate pipeline, including two ready-to-build solar-plus-storage projects with a combined capacity of 900 megawatts of generation and 3,600 megawatt-hours of storage. Offtake agreements are already secured with mining giant Rio Tinto and the Commonwealth of Australia, anchoring the projects with high-profile corporate and government backing.
Beyond these near-term builds, the equity injection will also support development of Edify’s 11-gigawatt pipeline of hybrid and storage projects across New South Wales, Queensland, and Victoria. The company has already delivered 11 projects totaling more than 1.1 GW since its founding in 2015.
A Pioneer in Australia’s Green Grid
Edify has positioned itself at the forefront of innovation in Australia’s energy market. In 2018, it delivered the country’s first utility-scale solar and battery storage project. Since then, it has become known for commercializing complex projects that combine renewable generation with advanced storage solutions, helping to smooth output and improve grid reliability.
Founder and Executive Chairman John Cole said the La Caisse acquisition gives Edify the “balance sheet strength to seriously ramp up” delivery of dispatchable renewable projects. “In La Caisse, we have found the perfect owner to supercharge the business and take Edify’s enviable market position to the next level,” he said.
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Global Capital Meets Local Transition
For La Caisse, the deal is part of a broader strategy to deploy long-term capital into assets that align with global sustainability goals. Emmanuel Jaclot, Executive Vice-President and Head of Infrastructure and Sustainability, described Edify as a “critical platform for accelerating the delivery of large-scale renewable and storage projects.”
“With our long-term capital and sustainability expertise, Edify will accelerate the delivery of large-scale renewable and storage projects that strengthen the grid and advance decarbonization,” Jaclot said.
Governance and Market Implications
Elements of the transaction remain subject to change-of-control and regulatory approvals. Advisors on the deal included ICA Partners and Clifford Chance for La Caisse, while Lazard Australia and Herbert-Smith Freehills advised Edify.
The acquisition comes as Australia accelerates efforts to replace aging coal plants with cleaner alternatives, with storage capacity seen as the linchpin of the transition. For investors, the Edify transaction underscores how global capital is increasingly targeting hybrid renewable-storage assets as the most commercially viable way to deliver firm, low-carbon electricity.
Strategic Takeaway for Executives
For C-suite leaders and institutional investors, the Edify-La Caisse deal highlights three key dynamics shaping global energy finance:
- Integrated projects are now the baseline: solar and wind projects without storage are becoming harder to finance at scale.
- Global capital is seeking credible platforms: investors want proven developers with track records, pipelines, and offtake certainty.
- Australia remains a test case: its rapid coal phase-out and reliance on storage will be watched closely by markets facing similar challenges.
The transaction’s significance extends beyond Australia. It illustrates how institutional investors are structuring long-term bets on the technologies and platforms expected to anchor future grids worldwide.
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