Root-Power has received a building permit for a 34 MW/68MWH Battery Energy Storage System (BESS) to be built in the Scottish Highlands.
The developer, the BESS-specialized spurs from Independent Power Producer (IPP) Ylem-Energie, selected the Dounreay site on the north coast of Scotland to offer support to an isolated part of the energy infrastructure of the VK. The site has a connecting date of 2026 and once confirmed, the Noord -Scotland and the Orkney Islands will serve.
The 34 MW project will use existing network infrastructure in an area that is already undergoing reinforcement projects to meet the increasing demand for energy and the growth of renewable energy sources onshore and offshore in the region.
Root-Power Managing Director Neil Brooks noted that the challenges of development at such a remote location include coordination visits and public involvement “for a project that is closer to Norway than our head offices”.
The permission is the second Root-Power that has been received this year this year, with a 40MW/80mWH Bess in Selby, North Yorkshire, which will be given a building permit in January.
When it was launched, Root-Power appointed planning advice agencies LANPRO, PWA Planning, RCA Regeneration, ELG Planning and Clive Fagg planning, to speed up the delivery of his 40 project pipeline.
One of the largest projects in the pipeline, the 100 MW/200MWH Granborough project in Buckinghamshire, has already reached the advanced development phase of the planning process.
Scottish Bess -Pijpline
Given the amount of renewable energy generation in the country, Scotland is an excellent place for energy storage as a way to prevent expensive limitation when the local schedule cannot handle the quantities of available energy. Although Scotland houses large quantities and offshore wind generation, the transmission network is not infrastructurally equipped to transport the energy to the south.
This was the reason behind the location of the largest Bess projects in Europe in the nation.
Scotland is the home of two Bess developments with a combined capacity of 1GW, which Renewable Fund Manager Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners (CIP) has made a financial investment decision (FID) before the start of the year.
Speak with our sister site, Energy storage.The British commercial director of the company, Malcolm Paterson, said that the sites, together with a third party that CIP was wearing FID in 2024, is going a long way to support the ambition of the UK to take no matter and the costs for consumers to lower and strengthen energy security “.
He added: “Location is the most important bit for batteries connected to transmission as they are. They are in a sensitive location, on the B5 limit. There are no local markets as such, but instead of limiting the wind, the National Energy System Operator (NESO) can now charge our Bess via the Balancing Mechanism (BM). The BM and Intraday trade are the most important routes to Market (RTM) for the projects. “
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