The Journal

Britishvol­t site sold to US firm

- JAMES ROBINSON Reporter james.robinson@reachplc.com

AMERICAN investment firm Blackstone has completed its purchase of the former Britishvol­t site in Northumber­land, it has been confirmed.

The leader of Northumber­land County Council Glen Sanderson revealed that the sale had gone through in the early hours of Wednesday.

The council has also negotiated a new buy-back arrangemen­t in the event the project is not built, similar to the one with Britishvol­t.

The company, alongside its data subsidiary QTS, plans to build a series of AI data centres on the land at Cambois near Blyth, which was previously earmarked for a gigafactor­y producing electric car batteries. The site, also known as Northumber­land Energy Park Phase 3 or NEP 3, will now provide the necessary computing power needed to drive the booming artificial intelligen­ce sector.

Up to £10bn will be invested into the area while £110m will be pumped into the council’s coffers to fund business investment­s across the county.

The £110m sale was agreed as part of a deal that saw the council drop the previous buy-back agreement that was on the land.

Speaking at the annual general meeting of the county council on Wednesday, Coun Sanderson said: “As we move into this next year, we can look forward to some very exciting developmen­ts.

“I can announce that this morning at around 1am Blackstone bought the land at NEP 3 and agreed to a new buyback clause.

This is tremendous news and I’m very proud to be able to say that.

“This will be the largest investment to come to Northumber­land, ever.”

The county council confirmed a new buyback clause was in place.

A spokesman said: “As per the recommenda­tion agreed by cabinet on 23rd April, now the land transactio­n is complete, a new buyback arrangemen­t has been put in place in the unlikely event the planned developmen­t did not proceed.”

The council say the project will create more than 1,600 direct jobs, including 1,200 long-term constructi­on jobs, as well as more than 2,700 indirect jobs.

 ?? ?? > Leader of Northumber­land County Council Glen Sanderson
> Leader of Northumber­land County Council Glen Sanderson
 ?? ?? > How one of the data centres could look
> How one of the data centres could look

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