The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Power to the people as eco team seeks to link city to local-based grid

- PETER JOHN MEIKLEM

People in Perth could become some of the first in the UK to draw their electricit­y from a locallyown­ed, renewable power grid.

Entreprene­urs linked to the Binn Farm Eco Park in nearby Glenfarg want to link their growing array of renewable power sources to customers in the Fair City.

The privately-owned grid would be completely separate to the power provided on the UK-wide National Grid.

The Powering Perth plan could help slash carbon emissions. That would also deliver on Perth leaders’ ambitions to make their small city the most sustainabl­e in Europe.

In what could become a first for the UK, the team hope its new local energy grid could power the city’s network of electrical vehicle charging stations, among other potential business customers.

The Powering Perth team say its power would be green, generated only 12 miles from Perth and sold at a cheaper or at equivalent price to that provided currently by the National Grid.

The scheme is the number one priority project in the wider drive to make Perth Scotland’s first carbon neutral city by 2040.

That is five years before the Scottish target and 10 before the UK equivalent.

Gavin Catto is the founder of Green Cat Renewables. His business is central to the scheme. He said the world is watching how they progress.

“I think there are a great many cities, not just in Scotland and the UK, but worldwide who are looking at this,” he says.

“The whole world is going through this energy transition. Different places are trying different routes and we are definitely part of that mix. We hope to continue to be at the forefront.”

The eco park in the Ochil Hills comprises four 115m tall wind turbines.

The site should eventually have a maximum capacity of around 23 MW, enough to power thousands of homes and businesses.

But it is still a work in progress.

The completed park should include a solar farm, four wind turbines, anaerobic digestion plant, and a £70 million energyfrom-waste incinerato­r. A battery storage facility will help when the wind does not blow.

The solar farm proposal is not yet through the planning process.

But the ambition and purpose across the range of renewable technologi­es is clear.

And it is ambition that policymake­rs are increasing­ly attracted to. Especially as the practical steps needed to cut carbon emissions to net-zero become clearer.

A Perth and Kinross Council spokespers­on confirmed its officers were considerin­g how “our energy projects and capital investment could support the creation of a private electricit­y renewable network such as the Powering Perth Project”.

The UK grid is already creaking, at least in environmen­tal terms.

The current period of low wind and high gas prices means the grid has fallen back on coal-generated power.

That is embarrassi­ng ahead of COP26 global climate talks.

That wider picture, Gavin suggests, only reinforces the importance of projects like Powering Perth.

“We need to take a much bigger, wider view as we start to decarbonis­e transport and our wider energy systems,” he said.

 ?? Picture by Kenny Smith. ?? CHARGED UP: Eco businessma­n John Ferguson and engineer Gavin Catto aim to harness renewables power at Binn Farm Eco Park.
Picture by Kenny Smith. CHARGED UP: Eco businessma­n John Ferguson and engineer Gavin Catto aim to harness renewables power at Binn Farm Eco Park.

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