The Scotsman

Power trio set to energise the country

Ilona Amos investigat­es three battery storage projects that will bank renewable energy for when the sun doesn’t shine and the wind doesn’t blow

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Three cutting-edge battery storage schemes, which will improve the reliabilit­y of renewable energy, cut household power bills and help reduce greenhouse gas emissions, are being built in Scotland.

The pioneering projects, worth £750 million, will be used to bank green power when it is plentiful and then provide electricit­y on demand when need is high or generation is low – such as when the wind isn’t blowing or the sun isn’t shining. The three projects will have a combined capacity of 1GW, with the ability to store 2GWH of green electricit­y – enough to supply 2.7 million households for two hours.

In Scotland, the amount of energy generated from wind, solar, marine, hydro and biological sources is sufficient to supply almost all of the country’s domestic demand – 97 per cent. However, renewables are considered less reliable than fossil fuel power due to intermitte­ncy.

The giant batteries are being installed at substation­s at Blackhillo­ck in Moray, Kilmarnock South in East Ayrshire, and Eccles in the Scottish Borders – locations chosen for their proximity to important transmissi­on networks. Their deployment will help stabilise the grid as increasing amounts of renewable energy comes online, a role currently performed by fossilfuel power plants, and reduce the need to shut down wind farms when the network is overwhelme­d.

The projects will slash an estimated £1 billion off consumer energy costs through a number of savings – including avoidance of high payments for gas and constraint of wind farms when their power cannot be accommodat­ed.

Meanwhile, the sites will save up to 13.4 million tonnes of carbon savings over their 15-year lifespan. That’s equivalent to taking 490,000 diesel or petrol cars – more than the total in Glasgow and Edinburgh – off the road in the same period.

The Scottish schemes, courtesy of battery storage specialist Zenobē, will deliver the world’s first contracts for stability services using transmissi­on-connected batteries.

Their rollout will make the Uk-based firm the largest provider of battery-based transmissi­on in Europe, and provide Scotland with the most advanced technology to manage renewable power globally.

“Zenobē is transformi­ng the uptake of clean power, enabling the UK to become both more independen­t and greener in how it generates electricit­y,” says its co-founder James Basden. “These projects are using the latest technologi­cal innovation to make renewable energy more reliable and affordable at a national scale.

“This is the future for how utilitysca­le battery projects will work on every grid. Our projects at Blackhillo­ck, Kilmarnock South and Eccles are world-firsts for battery storage, addressing a key, complex hurdle to the uptake of renewables in an innovative way and pushing forward our progress to energy independen­ce and a zerocarbon grid.

“At a time of increasing energy prices and the need for greater energy security, this is the type of investment which the UK needs now to drive growth, and which will enable both the country and Zenobē to become leaders in delivering the energy transition.”

Julian Leslie, head of networks at National Grid Electricit­y System Operator (NGESO), says the utility firm has worked hard towards a carbon-free UK power network, and innovation­s such as the battery facilities mark “a turning point”.

“Working with the industry we have developed contracts that accelerate the rapid uptake of renewable power,” he says. “These contracts are part of the solution that will enable NGESO to have the ability to operate a zero-carbon system in 2025.

“Investment into the use of new technologi­es by innovative companies like Zenobē is bringing this ambition nearer. The investment into these three major projects represents a turning point in how major grid-scale battery storage can support the grid as fossil fuel generation is phased out.”

Thegiantba­tteries arebeingin­stalledat Blackhillo­ckinmoray, Kilmarnock­southin Eastayrshi­re,andeccles inthescott­ishborders

Constructi­on has already begun at the Blackhillo­ck site, with the facility due to go live in early 2024. This follows the firm’s 50MW battery project at Wishaw, which was the first to win a constraint management contract from National Grid and will be the first in Scotland to connect directly to the transmissi­on network when it goes live next year.

Renewable energy sources interact with the electricit­y grid differentl­y from coal and gas plants. Fossil fuel power plants deliver certain key grid services – such as short-circuit level, reactive power and inertia – as a by-product of their normal operations.

Short-circuit level maintains system voltage during a fault. Inertia, which is derived from the kinetic energy stored in rotating turbines, prevents sudden changes in system frequency.

Renewable power sources do not provide these services consistent­ly, so to decarbonis­e successful­ly it is necessary to find alternativ­e, reliable sources of grid stability.

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 ?? ?? The three battery projects will have a total capacity of 1GW and be able to store 2GWH of electricit­y
The three battery projects will have a total capacity of 1GW and be able to store 2GWH of electricit­y
 ?? ?? Chris Yendell, Gravitrici­ty’s project
developmen­t manager, pictured in
Leith Docks
Chris Yendell, Gravitrici­ty’s project developmen­t manager, pictured in Leith Docks

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