EXPLORE KNOWLEDGE BASE
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CERI Knowledge Base
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About the CERI knowledge base
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Introduction to Australia’s electricity markets
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Australian consumer insights
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CER technical and interoperability standards
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Connecting a customer to an electricity network
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Connecting a generator to a distribution network
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Utility interconnection (CSIP-AUS)
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Dynamic network export and generation control schemes
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Network load control schemes
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Network tariffs and network support services
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Participating in the National Electricity Market
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Participating in a frequency control market
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Participating in the RERT
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Participating in the Wholesale Electricity Market (Western Australia)
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Participating in the I-NTEM (NT)
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Cyber security and data privacy arrangements
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Consumer protection frameworks
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Dynamic network export and generation control schemes
Last Updated on 5 March 2026
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To succeed in the Australian market, CER product and project developers must design solutions that are interoperable, scalable, and compliant with evolving DNSP and AEMO requirements. Depending on project size and location, this can include supporting flexible export limits, robust SCADA integration, and alternative voltage management arrangements.
This section summarises the dynamic network export and generation control schemes that underpin the integration of embedded generation in Australia. Developers should monitor regulatory changes, engage with DNSP guidelines, and prioritise technical flexibility to ensure products remain relevant as market requirements evolve.
The four articles in this section are summarised as follows.
Emergency backstop mechanisms
Australian DNSPs are required to implement emergency backstop mechanisms to maintain power system security during rare events, such as minimum system load. These mechanisms allow DNSPs to temporarily curtail solar generation or exports from embedded generators. Activation is strictly limited to specific regional or system-wide conditions and is coordinated by AEMO, with DNSPs responsible for enacting control through technology solutions. Emergency backstop capabilities are mandated for new or upgraded PV installations in Victoria, South Australia, and Western Australia, while Queensland requires generation signalling devices for systems above 10 kW. South Australia and Western Australia are transitioning to CSIP-AUS as the standard protocol, with NSW and the ACT introducing mandatory requirements from July 2026.
Flexible export arrangements
Flexible export programs allow embedded generators to export to the grid up to a dynamic limit, reflecting real-time network capacity. Unlike static export limits, flexible exports enable higher average export levels and greater customer returns, especially BESS and V2G and those on dynamic pricing plans. Flexible export programs are expanding nationally, with all DNSPs expected to offer them by 2030.
SCADA integration and control
For larger embedded generators, DNSPs require direct visibility and control of plant operation via SCADA systems. Integration typically involves either SCADA protocol (DNP3 or IEC 60870-5) for continuous telemetry and control, or discrete I/O signalling for critical protection functions. Technical requirements vary by jurisdiction and connection type, but commonly include utility-grade interconnection protection, anti-islanding controls, and SCADA telemetry.
Power quality and voltage management
Maintaining network voltage within allowable limits is a key challenge as embedded generation increases. DNSPs deploy strategies such as site export limits, tap-changing transformers, and community-scale batteries. Larger generators are expected to provide advanced voltage management capabilities, including four-quadrant operation (dynamic control of both active and reactive power), continuous telemetry, and compliance with negotiated limits on voltage unbalance and harmonics. Product solutions must support both autonomous inverter functions (volt-var, volt-watt) and advanced plant controllers capable of dynamic setpoints and coordinated control.