MyFarm CEO Andrew Watters (left) and Hiringa co-founder and chair Catherine Clennett, in front of the first solar panels installed at the Ruakākā solar-to-hydrogen farm. Photo / Peter Payne
MyFarm CEO Andrew Watters (left) and Hiringa co-founder and chair Catherine Clennett, in front of the first solar panels installed at the Ruakākā solar-to-hydrogen farm. Photo / Peter Payne
A massive truckload of solar panels arrived in Ruakākā this week as Hiringa Energy starts work on its first solar-to-hydrogen farm.
Built on a 5ha site beside Port Marsden Highway (SH15), the project will generate renewable energy to produce green hydrogen – another step towards a low-emissions transport future forNew Zealand in the global effort to reduce climate change.
With construction on Hiringa’s solar farm now underway, Ruakākā is fast becoming a hub for next-generation energy innovation.
The Hiringa project, on leased land, is just up the road from Meridian’s 201ha, 250,000‑panel solar development.
Hiringa’s project is dedicated to generating solar power for conversion to hydrogen – contributing to supply for the company’s growing $50 million network of clean‑fuel stations across the North Island – the first in Australasia.
Meridian’s $227m, 130-megawatt (MW) farm is designed to generate grid‑scale electricity – enough to power roughly half the homes in Northland.
Hiringa’s Ruakākā hydrogen-to-solar farm is the first of five planned by the company with its investment partner MyFarm and is set for completion within three months. Initially, it will support Hiringa’s four hydrogen refuelling stations – at Wiri, Te Rapa, Palmerston North and Tauranga.
Hiringa co-founder and chair Catherine Clennett said using a hydrogen-fuelled truck (leased from TR Group’s hydrogen-fuelled fleet by Booths Logistics) to transport the solar panels from Auckland to Ruakākā was a good example of how the project was cutting emissions even before opening. That process alone would avoid an estimated 10 tonnes of carbon.
Australian‑born and educated Clennett, whose engineering and commercial background spans the energy, resources, infrastructure and telecommunications sectors, founded Hiringa with her husband Andrew Clennett, chief technical officer Dan Kahn and head of trading and markets Matthew Carnachan.
The company positions itself as a leader in generating renewable electricity and “making, moving, storing and selling” green hydrogen for industry and transport.
Clennett said construction methods across the company’s projects were chosen to reduce embodied carbon, including cutting back on concrete and steel.
The Ruakākā project is being delivered with investment partner MyFarm, which invests across New Zealand’s rural economy. MyFarm raised $17.7m from about 70 wholesale investors – around 90% New Zealand based – to support Hiringa’s solar-to-hydrogen farm rollout.
The two companies have entered a 10‑year agreement under which Hiringa will buy 100% of the power generated from up to five solar farms developed over the next two to three years.
MyFarm CEO Andrew Watters said the 5MW scale was chosen because it was “commercially meaningful but quick to establish”. Despite not being a fast-tracked project, Ruakākā moved from concept to construction in just over 12 months – far shorter than the four- to six‑year timeframe typical for large solar projects.
Watters said solar still contributed only about 1% of New Zealand’s electricity but was likely to grow to 10%, calling the industry “still quite new”. He estimated about 30,000 panels would be installed at Ruakākā, taking advantage of a 10‑fold drop in panel costs over the past decade.
Clennett said Ruakākā’s location was strategically ideal for the network. “There are a lot of heavy‑vehicle movements up into Northland and back to Auckland.”
Avoiding carbon from the outset ... panels for Hiringa's new solar-to-hydrogen farm at Ruakākā arrive on one of TR Group's fleet of hydrogen-powered trucks, the only emissions from which are water. Photo / Peter Payne
With wharf infrastructure being redeveloped at Marsden Point, Clennett said the site would be well-placed to support emerging green shipping lanes.
Heavy road transport is only the start of Hiringa’s green energy ambitions. The company also wants to supply fuel to the rail, aviation, and marine sectors – areas where electrification remains limited and where high‑energy‑density fuels are essential.
Low-emission freight is becoming a commercial incentive for exporters, particularly those supplying Europe, where companies must now report and reduce carbon across supply chains, Clennet said. Green transport corridors, she said, are moving from concept to a real, purchasable reality.
Clennet said the use of hydrogen fuel added only about 0.1% to the overall project cost, while delivering disproportionately large emissions benefits.
Hydrogen trucks drive almost identically to diesel models, with similar torque and handling and operational feel – the difference being that the exhaust releases only water vapour.
The construction of the farm is expected to employ about 50 locals. Photo / Peter Payne
Hiringa’s goals, including its $50m investment in the refuelling stations, aligns with the Government’s decarbonisation policy and was initially supported by a $16m loan from the Covid-19 Recovery fund.
Clennett said construction of the Ruakākā project would generate employment for about 50 people and had created work for Patu Harakeke, Northdrill and McKay, with some ongoing roles expected once the site becomes operational.
This project met with no public opposition. Hiringa previously faced a Court of Appeal challenge by Greenpeace Aotearoa and Ngāruahine hapū to its Kāpuni wind‑to‑hydrogen project.
Sarah Curtis is a news reporter for the Northern Advocate, covering a wide range of issues. She has 20 years’ experience in journalism, mostly as a court reporter in Gisborne and on the East Coast.