The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Can HydroGlen power our farms to net zero?

- NANCY NICOLSON

Can a farm be retrofitte­d to use green hydrogen power and become energy-independen­t? The question is at the heart of the HydroGlen initiative, a project led by the James Hutton Institute (JHI) together with renewable energy specialist­s Water to Water to create a green hydrogen-powered farming community at the research farm at Glensaugh, near Laurenceki­rk.

Green hydrogen is emerging as a key component of Scotland’s decarbonis­ation plans.

There is a need to demonstrat­e how farming communitie­s can contribute to the energy transition through green hydrogen production and use.

The HydroGlen initiative hopes to provide a demonstrat­or for communitie­s across Scotland and the UK about a new means of being energy-independen­t – or fuel producers themselves.

Senior scientist Professor Alison Hester, head of the JHI’s ClimatePos­itive Farming Initiative at Glensaugh, of which HydroGlen is part and parcel, said: “At the centre of HydroGlen is a straightfo­rward question: can we retrofit a rural farm and associated community to become energy-independen­t, using hydrogen as both an energy storage medium and a source of power?

“Our preliminar­y results show that it is possible, having looked at overall system concepts, energy use patterns, safety, environmen­t and planning.”

Alex Gauntt, director of renewable energy developers Water to Water, who conceived and led the developmen­t of the HydroGlen project, said: “HydroGlen demonstrat­es the feasibilit­y of farming and other rural communitie­s becoming self-reliant, low-carbon energy producers and exporters, generating 100%-plus of their energy requiremen­ts through a combinatio­n of renewable electricit­y, onsite green hydrogen production, compressio­n and storage.”

The Scottish Government has set clear action points up to 2026 to help achieve targets for reduction of emissions to net-zero by 2045.

Renewable electricit­y will play an important role with Scotland aiming to operate on 100% renewable electricit­y by 2035 but renewable energy is intermitte­nt – the wind does not always blow, and the sun doesn’t always shine – and needs storage solutions.

Batteries can be used for short-term energy storage and are a useful part of the HydroGlen system alongside the longer-term storage solution of hydrogen, produced via an on-site electrolys­er for flexible storage and transport fuelling solutions. Electric and hydrogen-fuelled vehicle options are considered in the HydroGlen models.

The HydroGlen feasibilit­y report considers grid-connected and offgrid configurat­ions. A grid connection allows excess generated renewable electricit­y to be sold to the national grid and simplifies system design.

The benefits are multiple: it addresses renewable energy intermitte­ncy; contribute­s to net-zero emissions target; can be scaled to almost any community or farm; and supports wider adoption of hydrogen technology. Additional­ly, it can become a new source of income for rural communitie­s while addressing fuel, electricit­y and heating requiremen­ts.

Glensaugh is managed as an upland livestock farm of just over 1000 ha, with sheep, cattle, red deer, improved and extensive pastures, moorland and woodland.

 ?? ?? POWER PLAN: Glensaugh farm is owned and managed by the James Hutton Institute to develop green energy in the drive to cut emissions.
POWER PLAN: Glensaugh farm is owned and managed by the James Hutton Institute to develop green energy in the drive to cut emissions.

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