Australia’s electricity grid needs constant balance. At every moment, the amount of electricity being generated must closely match the amount being used. When that balance shifts, grid frequency moves away from its normal operating range. Frequency Control Ancillary Services help correct those movements and keep the power system stable.
In Australia’s National Electricity Market (NEM), frequency is measured in hertz (Hz). The grid operates at a nominal frequency of 50 Hz. The normal operating frequency band sits between 49.85 Hz and 50.15 Hz. When supply and demand fall out of balance, frequency rises or falls. A sudden generator trip, a large industrial load switching on or a shift in solar output can all affect frequency. If those changes are not managed quickly, equipment may disconnect to protect itself, which can trigger a cascading effect and risk wider system instability.
Frequency Control Ancillary Services, commonly shortened to FCAS, are the services that help maintain frequency within acceptable limits. While electricity generation and consumption are what most people notice, FCAS works in the background to help ensure the system remains secure.
Key Points
The NEM operates at a nominal frequency of 50 Hz and FCAS keeps it within the Normal Operating Frequency Band of 49.85 to 50.15 Hz.
There are ten FCAS markets in the NEM, divided into regulation and contingency services, with response times ranging from one second to five minutes.
Very Fast FCAS markets, introduced in October 2023, require a response time of just one second and are now dominated by battery storage assets.
As coal and gas plant retires, batteries, demand response systems and flexible industrial loads are taking on a greater role in providing FCAS.
Eligible participants include large batteries, aggregators, demand response providers and commercial and industrial sites that meet the relevant technical and market requirements.
Accurate, revenue-grade metering is essential for FCAS participation and performance verification. SATEC’s NMI approved meters and Expertpower software provide the measurement layer businesses need to understand and optimise their FCAS capability.
How Frequency Control Ancillary Services Work
The grid relies on a mix of technologies to respond when frequency moves. Some services act almost instantly while others support the system over several minutes. The aim is to correct frequency deviations before they become serious.
When frequency drops, the grid needs more supply or less demand. This can involve generators increasing output, batteries discharging energy or large loads reducing consumption. When frequency rises, the opposite response is needed. Generators may reduce output, batteries may charge or flexible loads may increase their demand. These responses are enabled by market mechanisms, technical standards and control systems that allow capable assets to provide frequency support.
In Australia, FCAS markets create a way for eligible participants to be paid for making this support available. AEMO procures FCAS as market ancillary services, paying providers to stand by and respond when needed. Every five minutes, each FCAS service is priced as its own market. Bidding occurs across ten price tranches with a floor of $0 per MW per hour and a market cap set by the Australian Energy Market Commission.
The Ten FCAS Markets
There are ten FCAS markets in the NEM, divided into two main functions. Regulation FCAS is used continuously to make fine adjustments to frequency. AEMO sends automatic control signals every four seconds via Automatic Generation Control to generators and batteries, instructing them to slightly adjust their output.
There are two regulation markets – Regulation Raise and Regulation Lower.
Contingency FCAS is used to respond to sudden, large imbalances such as a major generator tripping offline or the loss of a transmission line. There are eight contingency markets based on response speed:
| Market | Type | Response Time | Purpose | Typical Providers |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Regulation Raise | Regulation | Continuous (every 4 sec) | Correct minor frequency drops | Large generators, batteries (>5 MW with SCADA) |
| Regulation Lower | Regulation | Continuous (every 4 sec) | Correct minor frequency rises | Large generators, batteries (>5 MW with SCADA) |
| Very Fast Raise (R1) | Contingency | 1 second | Arrest sudden frequency drops | Batteries, demand response |
| Very Fast Lower (L1) | Contingency | 1 second | Arrest sudden frequency rises | Batteries, demand response |
| Fast Raise | Contingency | 6 seconds | Arrest frequency drops | Batteries, hydro, fast-start gas |
| Fast Lower | Contingency | 6 seconds | Arrest frequency rises | Batteries, hydro, fast-start gas |
| Slow Raise | Contingency | 60 seconds | Stabilise frequency after arrest | Generators, batteries, interruptible loads |
| Slow Lower | Contingency | 60 seconds | Stabilise frequency after arrest | Generators, batteries, interruptible loads |
| Delayed Raise | Contingency | 5 minutes | Restore frequency to normal band | Generators, hydro, demand response |
| Delayed Lower | Contingency | 5 minutes | Restore frequency to normal band | Generators, hydro, demand response |
Raise services respond when frequency is too low. Lower services respond when frequency is too high. Eligible assets can participate in multiple markets simultaneously.
Why FCAS Matters More Than Ever
FCAS has always been important. Its role is becoming more visible as the energy system changes. Traditional power systems were built around large synchronous generators such as coal, gas and hydro plants. These machines naturally helped stabilise frequency through their physical inertia.
As more renewable generation connects to the grid, the character of the power system is changing. Solar and wind generation are cleaner and increasingly cost-competitive. They do not provide the same frequency support as traditional rotating machines unless paired with appropriate technology and controls. This shift does not make renewables the problem. It means the grid needs smarter ways to manage fast changes in supply and demand.
Batteries have become the leading provider of contingency FCAS in the NEM because they can respond in a fraction of a second, either discharging to raise frequency or charging to lower it. Demand response systems, advanced inverters and flexible industrial loads can also help provide FCAS across various time frames. The introduction of Very Fast FCAS markets in October 2023, requiring a response time of just one second, reflects this evolution.
These markets were designed to harness assets that can respond almost instantly and were introduced by the Australian Energy Market Commission to keep the future power system secure as faster-responding technologies come online.
Who Can Participate in FCAS?
FCAS participation is not limited to traditional generators. Large batteries, aggregators, demand response providers, commercial and industrial sites and certain distributed energy resources can all play a role where they meet the relevant technical and market requirements.
Participants must register with AEMO to participate in each distinct FCAS market. Once registered, a service provider can participate by submitting an appropriate offer or bid via AEMO’s Market Management Systems. Regulation FCAS participation is effectively limited to larger utility-scale assets as it requires control systems capable of sending and receiving SCADA signals from AEMO every four seconds.
Contingency FCAS markets are accessible to a broader range of assets including batteries and interruptible loads. Each participation model depends on accurate measurement, visibility and verification of asset performance.
Why Metering Matters for FCAS
FCAS depends on confidence. AEMO, market participants and asset owners all need to know what happened during a frequency event. Did the asset respond? How quickly did it respond? Was the response sustained for the required duration? Were there power quality issues that affected performance or reliability? Basic energy data is not always enough.
FCAS environments often require detailed monitoring of electrical parameters, timing, load behaviour and power quality. Without accurate measurement, it becomes harder to optimise performance, diagnose issues and support reporting obligations.
How SATEC Supports FCAS-Ready Metering
Accurate metering is at the heart of any credible FCAS strategy. For organisations exploring FCAS or managing assets that support grid flexibility, the right metering layer makes it possible to understand real electrical performance rather than estimate it.
The PRO Series has been purpose-built to assist with compliance to AEMO’s Market Ancillary Service Specification (MASS) across all FCAS markets including Very Fast, Fast, Slow, Delayed and Regulation. Available as either the panel-mounted PM335 or the DIN-rail mounted EM235, both models deliver Class 0.2S accuracy and frequency resolution of 0.0001 Hz to four decimal places.
This level of precision is what AEMO’s MASS requirements demand and what asset owners need to verify performance with confidence. The PRO Series supports real-time data delivery at 20 milliseconds via Modbus RTU/TCP and internal data recording at 20 ms for Very Fast and Fast markets or one-second recording periods for Slow and Delayed markets.
Data capture is triggered around the Frequency Deviation Time, recording 5 seconds before and 60 seconds after for fast markets and 20 seconds before and 10 minutes after for slow markets. All units are supplied with NATA test certificates. Both models support dual Ethernet TCP/IP, RS-485, USB-C and infrared communication and are compatible with IEC 61850, Modbus TCP and IEC 60870-5-104 protocols. An embedded Programmable Logic Controller (PLC) enables advanced control and automation functions for more complex site requirements.
What Businesses Should Consider
Businesses interested in FCAS should begin with a clear understanding of their electrical assets, flexibility and data quality. A site may have a battery, generator or controllable load. Participation depends on whether that asset can meet the relevant technical and operational requirements set by AEMO.
Good metering helps answer the early questions. What is the site’s normal demand profile? Which loads are flexible? How does the site respond during disturbances? These questions are easier to answer when the electrical data is accurate and accessible.
A Smarter Grid Needs Better Measurement
Frequency Control Ancillary Services are a vital part of Australia’s changing energy system. They help maintain the balance between supply and demand, support frequency stability and create opportunities for flexible assets to contribute to grid reliability. As coal and gas generation exits the NEM and battery storage, wind and solar take a larger share, the importance of accurate metering will only increase.
Businesses that want to understand their energy performance or explore FCAS opportunities need data they can trust. With advanced metering, power quality monitoring and Expertpower software, SATEC provides a practical metering solution for organisations preparing for a more flexible and responsive energy future.
FAQs - What Is Frequency Control Ancillary Services (FCAS)?
What is FCAS and why does it matter for Australian businesses?
FCAS stands for Frequency Control Ancillary Services and refers to the services used to keep Australia’s electricity grid stable by balancing supply and demand in real time. Businesses with flexible assets such as batteries, generators or controllable loads may be eligible to participate in FCAS markets and earn revenue from AEMO.
Who can participate in FCAS markets in the NEM?
Participation is open to a wide range of asset owners including large batteries, aggregators, demand response providers and commercial and industrial sites that meet AEMO’s technical and market registration requirements. Traditional generators are no longer the only eligible participants.
Why is accurate metering important for FCAS?
AEMO and market participants need verified data to confirm that an asset responded correctly during a frequency event, including how quickly it responded and whether the response was sustained for the required duration. Without accurate, revenue-grade metering, it is difficult to demonstrate compliance, optimise performance or support reporting obligations.
What is the difference between regulation and contingency FCAS?
Regulation FCAS runs continuously, making small adjustments to frequency every four seconds to keep the grid within the normal operating band of 49.85 to 50.15 Hz. Contingency FCAS responds to sudden large events such as a generator trip, with response times ranging from one second for Very Fast markets through to five minutes for Delayed markets.



