Glasgow Times

Energy firm ‘ready to move mountains’

Plan to build new station within mountain

- BY KATRINE BUSSEY

ARENEWABLE energy firm wants to build a new undergroun­d hydro power station deep within a Scottish mountain. Bosses at Drax said plans have been submitted to expand their existing Cruachan Power Station to increase the total amount of energy the site can produce to 1.04 gigawatts.

To achieve that around two million tonnes of rock would need to be excavated to create the cavern, tunnels and other parts of the new power station

Drax said the planned station at its existing Hollow Mountain facility inside Ben Cruachan – Argyll’s highest mountain – would be the first newly constructe­d plant of its kind in the UK in more than 40 years.

The company also said its plans for a new undergroun­d pumped storage hydro power station would help cut carbon emissions and also boost energy security in the UK.

It believes a new station on the site could be operationa­l as soon as 2030, with constructi­on work getting under way in 2024.

Planning applicatio­ns are being submitted on Tuesday, with Drax stating around 900 jobs could be created over the six years constructi­on will take – with this total including supply chain jobs in a range of industries including quarrying, engineerin­g, transport and hospitalit­y.

Around 150 local on site constructi­on jobs will be created.

The plans for the power station will see reversible turbines used to pump water from Loch Awe to an upper reservoir on the mountainsi­de, with the hydro power plant then using this stored water to generate renewable electricit­y.

Ian Kinnaird, Drax’s Scottish assets director, said: “Drax’s plan to expand Cruachan will strengthen the UK’s energy security by enabling more homegrown renewable electricit­y to come online to power homes and businesses across the country, helping to end our reliance on imports and cut costs.

“This major infrastruc­ture project will support hundreds of jobs and provide a real boost to the Scottish economy.

“Only by investing in long-duration storage technologi­es can the

UK reach its full renewable potential, and Drax is ready to move mountains to do just that.”

Claire Mack, chief executive of the industry body Scottish Renewables, said the planned new station was “absolutely vital” to both Scotland and the UK.

She stated: “Pumped storage hydro is a critical technology needed to meet net-zero. Over the last decade we have managed to develop the technologi­es to decarbonis­e the power system such as wind and solar, but what we really need now is greater flexibilit­y to fully optimise those technologi­es.

“That’s why the success of long-duration storage projects such as Cruachan 2 is absolutely vital to Scotland and the whole of the UK.”

 ?? ?? Plans have been submitted to expand the existing Cruachan Power Station
Plans have been submitted to expand the existing Cruachan Power Station

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