The Anonymous Widower

Centrica Set For Solar Boost With Acquisition Of Two Projects In South-West England

The title of this post, is the same as that of this press release from Centrica.

These three bullet points act as sub-headings.

  • Two green energy schemes adding 32MW of solar and battery capacity – enough to power 7,800 homes per year
  • Site in Dorset sees construction of a 16MW solar farm and 3MW of battery storage, with a second operational site in Wiltshire adding 13MW of solar capacity
  • Investment part of Centrica’s £4bn green-focused investment plan by 2028

These four paragraphs give more details of the Dorset site.

In Dorset, the business has acquired development rights for the construction of a 16MW solar farm and 3MW battery storage plant near Winterborne Whitechurch.

The project breaks ground in early 2024, with the first power exported to the grid in 2025.

The site at Winterborne Whitechurch will be a co-located asset, with the solar farm and battery storage facilities using the same connection point to the grid, helping to maximise the grid connection.

The site is able to power 4,600 homes a year, supported by the battery that can deliver two-hours of energy for a similar number of properties.

But this is no bog-standard wind farm with an attached battery.

This web site introduces Blandford Hill Eco Hub.

This is the second paragraph on the web site’s home page.

​​The Blandford Hill Eco Hub project consists of an electric vehicle (EV) charging station, a 15 megawatt ground-mounted solar farm and a 3 megawatt battery storage faciality on land south of the A354 at Blandford Hill, Winterborne Whitechurch near Blandford Forum in Dorset. By combining green electricity generation, storage and charging, we’re maximising the green potential with charging for up to 19 EVs at a time.

Note.

  1. It’s rather a coincidence that the solar farm and battery are almost the same size to those in Centrica’s acquisition.
  2. The site appears to have been developed by a company called the Pegasus Group, that has used the trade name of Naturalis.
  3. It does look to me, that Centrica have bought this electric vehicle service station site.
  4. Centrica get a site to charge nineteen EVs at a time, with its own solar farm and battery.
  5. The location close to the village means that staff from the village could walk or cycle to work.
  6. All plans and planning permissions have been thought through and obtained.
  7. The site even has a dog-walking area, so you can walk the dog, whilst charging your car.

Perhaps, Centrica have a plan to roll out lots of electric vehicle service stations and it was cheaper to buy a innovative prototype, than do the research themselves?

Pegasus Group do seem to design quality projects.

This Google Map shows the location of the site.

Note.

  1. The village is Winterborne Whitechurch.
  2. The road going South-West and North-East is the A354 road, which runs between Dorchester in the South-West and Blandford Forum in the North-East.
  3. The electric vehicle service station appears to be in the large field to the South of the A 354.

It looks like the service station meets the three most important properties of a development; location, location and location.

Could This Site Be Updated To Hydrogen?

Consider.

  • Centrica have a substantial interest in a company called HiiROC, who use a technique called plasma electrolysis to extract hydrogen from any hydrocarbon gas.
  • The HiiROC process could be used to extract hydrogen from methane, where there is a reliable electricity supply.
  • If Winterborne Whitechurch is connected to the gas grid, then I’m certain, that a HiiROC system connected to the solar farm/battery system should be able to fuel passing hydrogen-powered vehicles.

Updates like this could see hydrogen-powered vehicles finally increase their market share.

The Second Site In Wiltshire

This paragraph details the Wiltshire site.

In addition, the business has also acquired the operational Roundponds Solar Farm in Wiltshire. The 13MW solar farm was commissioned in 2015 and is capable of providing energy for around 3,200 homes every year.

This looks like one of those investments, where big companies let small companies get all the permissions and build the asset, before they buy it.

Conclusion

These two projects fit into Centrica’s future development plan.

The last paragraphs, gives a few details of some of Centrica’s new assets.

The Winterborne and Roundponds projects will contribute towards Centrica’s long-term plan to deliver a portfolio of green energy transition assets. They follow the construction of an 18MW solar farm at Codford, Wiltshire which was commissioned in 2023 and a 20MW hydrogen-ready gas-fired peaking plant in Worcestershire. In addition, Centrica is delivering a 50MW battery storage project in Brigg, Lincolnshire, which is nearing completion.

It will be interesting to see what other assets Centrica acquire in the next couple of years.

 

 

March 25, 2024 Posted by | Energy, Hydrogen | , , , , | 1 Comment