Yorkshire Post

Quarries to be used for power project

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A SCHEME which will use two disused slate quarries on the edge of Snowdonia as reservoirs for power storage has been given the go-ahead by the Government.

The £160m Glyn Rhonwy pumped storage project, close to Llanberis, will use surplus electricit­y, for example from wind power, to pump water through an undergroun­d tunnel from the lower to the upper reservoir.

When power is needed, water will flow back down the tunnel, turning a turbine in an undergroun­d chamber to regenerate the stored electricit­y, developer Snowdonia Pumped Hydro (SPH) said. The 99 megawatt (MW) scheme will store some 700 megawatt hours (MWh) of electricit­y – enough to supply 200,000 homes with electricit­y for seven hours a day over a projected lifetime of 125 years or more, according to the company.

Constructi­on of the first new grid-scale electricit­y storage facility to be built in Britain for more than 30 years could begin as early as next year, after Business Secretary Greg Clark granted a developmen­t consent order for the scheme.

SPH managing director David Holmes said: “There are signs that the Government is taking storage seriously.

“The National Infrastruc­ture Commission last year urged swift action on storage, and a team inside the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy is looking urgently at how planning barriers and market disincenti­ves to storage can be addressed. We see the granting of permission for our Glyn Rhonwy scheme as highly significan­t.”

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