WEM battery revenues rose in May 2026, but merchant returns stayed negative
WEM battery revenues rose in May 2026, but merchant returns stayed negative
In May 2026, grid-scale battery revenues in the Wholesale Electricity Market rose 43% month-on-month to $40k/MW/year. The increase came as daily price spreads widened, with the 2-hour spread rising 35% to $97/MWh from $72/MWh in April.
Despite this, the merchant component of revenue remained below zero for the second consecutive month. Energy revenue was -$12k/MW/year, partly offset by FCESS, but total revenues still relied on RCM payments to finish positive. May also recorded no negative prices, leaving batteries with no opportunities to earn whilst charging.
Neoen’s Collie units recorded positive merchant returns, while Synergy’s fleet continued to lose money on energy. The difference reflects how each asset operated through a month with higher average prices and no negative-price charging intervals.
This article reviews WEM battery revenues for May 2026, including asset-level merchant performance, market conditions, fleet growth and contracted revenue. Read last month's article here.
Executive summary
- WEM total battery revenues rose 43% month-on-month to $40k/MW/year in May, supported by RCM revenue.
- The merchant component remained negative for the second consecutive month, partly offset by FCESS revenue.
- Energy revenue alone was -$12k/MW/year, marking the third month of losses. With no negative-price hours, batteries had fewer opportunities to earn while charging.
- Four of the six operational batteries recorded merchant losses, led by Kwinana 1 at -$48k/MW/year. Several Synergy assets continued to charge above their average discharge price.
Market conditions improved, but merchant returns stayed negative
Most market conditions improved between April and May. Peak operational demand rose to 3.1 GW from 2.9GW, average energy prices increased to $116/MWh, and daily price spreads widened across every duration.





