The Anonymous Widower

Battery Energy Storage Park Plans Submitted

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on the BBC.

This is the sub-heading.

A green energy company has pledged to fund up to £40m worth of community projects if a controversial battery energy storage system (BESS) in the North Yorkshire countryside goes ahead.

These three paragraphs fill out the story.

NatPower has submitted a planning application to North Yorkshire Council for the site on farmland near Thirsk.

If approved, the company said it would contribute up to £1m each year for 40 years to local businesses, charities and groups to develop “sustainable communities”.

However, campaign group Thirsk Against Battery Storage (TABS) said local residents remained opposed to the scheme.

If the developers of the BESS can afford to give forty million pounds to the community, there must be substantial sums to be made out of installing batteries like these.

I certainly believe that with the current government’s more relaxed attitude to renewable energy developments in the countryside, that we’ll see more batteries, solar panels and wind turbines on hill tops and behind barns band woods.

More and more bigger houses and small businesses will  install solar panels, smaller wind turbines and batteries and find they can be independent of the grid.

January 13, 2025 Posted by | Energy, Energy Storage | , , , | Leave a comment

Teesworks Joins Forces With NatPower On 1GW UK BESS

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on Solar Power Portal.

These are the first two paragraphs.

Teesworks, the UK’s largest industrial zone, has revealed plans for a 1GW battery energy storage system (BESS) in partnership with renewables developer NatPower.

The project will be constructed over 50 acres of the Long Acres section of the 4500-acre Teesworks site. Construction costs are expected to total around £1 billion. While the main plan for the BESS is focused on renewable energy storage, the company also noted that the system could also support electric vehicle (EV) charging in the future.

The article then lists several large BESS projects, that are under development.

It also suggests that investment in batteries is in a healthy state.

May 31, 2024 Posted by | Energy, Energy Storage | , , , | Leave a comment

UK’s Green Power Industry Receives Surprise £10bn Pledge

The title of this post, is the same as that of this article in the Guardian.

This is the sub-heading.

Potential investment by NatPower would create largest portfolio of battery storage projects in Britain

These five paragraphs outline the proposed investment.

Britain’s under-pressure green power industry has received a surprise fillip after a renewables developer pledged to plough £10bn into what would become the largest portfolio of battery storage projects in the country.

NatPower, a UK startup that is part of a larger European energy group, is poised to submit planning applications for three “gigaparks”, with a further 10 to follow next year.

Battery storage projects are seen as a key part of the jigsaw to decarbonise Britain’s power grid, allowing electricity generated by wind turbines and solar panels to be stored for use when weather conditions are still or not sunny.

The NatPower investment would lead to the construction of 60 gigawatt hours of battery storage, with solar and wind projects also in the pipeline.

The two gigaparks would be located in the north of England, with a further site in the west of the country planned later this year. The projects would be built on industrial land, and also through leasing deals with farmers.

Note.

  1. To gauge the scale of this development; the largest  energy storage development in the UK at present is SSE Renewable’s massive Coire Glas pumped storage hydro in the Highlands of Scotland, which is a 1.5 GW/30 GWh monster, that is budgeted to cost £1.5 billion.
  2. NatPower has a web site, which has an opening video, which is all landscape, sun, water and wind, that would be worthy of an epic from Hollywood or by Eisenstein.
  3. NatPower’s investment of £10 billion, buys them 60 GWh of storage and if it’s a proportionate amount of capacity to Coire Glas, perhaps around 3GW or around the capacity of Hinckley Point C.

I have a few thoughts.

Is It All A Hoax?

Those who were alive and sober in 1977, may well remember the April Fools’ Day Hoax of the Guardian of that year, which concerned a fake supplement in the paper promoting the island of San Serriffe.

The story has its own Wikipedia entry.

The web site; http://www.sanserriffe.com, doesn’t seem to be accessible.

Today’s story seems genuine, although some will smell a rat.

 

March 7, 2024 Posted by | Energy, Energy Storage, Finance | , , , | Leave a comment