Genex Power Limited is an ASX-listed company focused on developing a portfolio of renewable energy generation and storage projects in Australia. Genex’s diverse portfolio includes large-scale batteries, pumped storage hydro, wind and solar across Qld and NSW. The Company’s flagship Kidston Clean Energy Hub, located in north Queensland, will integrate large-scale solar generation with pumped storage hydro and potentially wind energy. The Kidston Clean Energy Hub comprises the operating 50MW stage 1 Solar Project and the 250MW Kidston Pumped Storage Hydro Project with potential for further multi-stage wind and solar projects.
Genex Power’s Kidston Pumped Storage Hydro Project (K2-Hydro) is the first pumped hydro project to be developed in over 40 years in Australia. K2-Hydro is currently under construction and is expected to be operational in 2025. Genex is further expanding its energy storage portfolio via the development of a 50MW/100MWh standalone battery energy storage system at Bouldercombe in Queensland. With over 470MW of renewable energy & storage projects in development, Genex is well placed as Australia’s leading renewable energy and storage company.
Board

Dr. Ralph Craven
Ind. Non-Executive Chairman

Simon Kidston
Non-Executive Director

Ben Guo
Non-Executive Director

Kenichi Seshimo
Non-Executive Director

Teresa Dyson
Non-Executive Director

Yongqing Yu
Non-Executive Director

Justin Clyne
Company Secretary
Management

James Harding
Chief Executive Officer

Arran McGhie
Chief Operations Officer

Craig Francis
Chief Financial Officer

Wendy Moloney
General Manager – Business Development and Operations
The township of Kidston was developed on the west bank of the Copperfield River after the official discovery of gold in 1907, leading to a rich period in Kidston’s history, initially known as the Oaks Rush. The town grew significantly overnight, with many miners and prospectors flooding in from all parts of the north to try their luck. The field proved to be rich and over the next three years an estimated 622,000 grams of gold had been mined. By May 1908, there were 1400 people residing at Oaks Rush and an estimated 430,000g of gold had been won.
The Oaks Rush Goldfield continued mining up until 1945 when it shut its doors only to reopen again in 1979 when Kidston Gold Mines applied to the Queensland Government to start full production again. Mining continued from 1985 until it was permanently closed in 2001.
After being a mining community for a century, Kidston is undergoing a monumental transformation with a new lease on life. The two large disused pits that made up the old gold mine are being converted into a world-first pumped storage hydro project, utilising an abandoned gold mine. The Kidston Pumped Storage Hydro Project is the first of its kind to be developed in Australia in over 40 years, combined with multi-stage solar and wind renewable energy assets underpinning the Kidston Clean Energy Hub.







