Energie -Secretary Ed Miliband has announced the first project that Great British Energy, a public of public ownership, will undertake.
An investment of £ 200 million from the British government and GB Energy will collaborate with schools and the NHS to install Solar PV on the roof at a total of 400 locations, which provide between 70 MW and 100 MW of solar generation.
In England, about £ 80 million in financing will support around 200 schools, in addition to £ 100 million for nearly 200 NHS sites, with the first solar systems installed at the end of the summer 2025.
In addition, local authorities and community energy groups will be supported with around £ 12 million to build clean energy projects, the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (Desnz) has announced.
Another £ 9.3 million will electricity schemes in Scotland, Wales and Noord -Ireland including Community Energy of Solar on the roof for public buildings.
In addition to supporting the Schone Power 2030 goal from the government, Solar PV -Arrays save money for the buildings on which they are installed. The announcement also states that electricity generated by the solar installations can be sold back to the grid, facilitated by battery energy storage systems (BESS) that can also be treated by the investment.
The NHS is the largest energy user of the public sector and spends around £ 1.4 billion every year, a figure that has almost doubled since 2019.
According to Miliband, the “first major project” of GB Energy “essential public institutions will save hundreds of millions on bills to invest again”.
Desnz predicts lifelong savings for schools and the NHS of a maximum of £ 400 million over 30 years.
Jess Ralston, energy analyst at the Energy & Climate Intelligence Unit (ECIU), mentioned the financing of GB Energy “essentially government investments in lower energy bills for the NHS and schools”.
Chairman of the energy company, Juergen Maier, said that cooperation with the public sector while GB is scaling up Energy, it will help to have “an immediate impact”.
Previous movements that the company has made have suggested that the most important Focus Offshore generation will be technologies, including Partnerships with the Crown Estate and Crown Estate Scotland And the appointment of Dan McGrail, which leads the trade body that represents companies that develop wind, golf, tidal, storage and green hydrogen projects in the UK.
The news of the project will follow the first meeting of the Great British Energy Start-up Board on 17 March.
Some of the hospitals involved in the scheme have the largest installations on the roof in the country: the installation in the Chesterfield Royal Hospital has an estimated more than 4 MW capacity. Others will install mounted solar PV in parking garags on the ground, instead of on the roof.
Solar Energy UK, the trade body that represents the solar industry, praised the decision and added that it also welcomes support for community energy “that usually supports solar projects on the public estate”.