An innovative hydro-electric scheme has re-purposed a major Yorkshire weir to deliver green power to a local flour mill, using batteries, a private wire and a corporate power purchase agreement (PPA) to optimise its economic return.
For a country as wet and rainy as Britain, it makes sense to capitalise on what falls out of the sky, and for centuries hydro power has been an enduring feature of our landscapes.
Weirs and watermills helped power the industrial revolution, and in the early years of the 20th century massive hydro schemes were built to deliver electric light to the Scottish Highlands and to spark industrial activity country-wide.
More recently, the green energy revolution has led to a renaissance in much smaller hydro-electric schemes, with dozens of projects from 250kW up to 2MW springing up, utilising ‘run-of-the-river’ techniques to capture the flow of our readily-replenished watercourses.
It’s a sector that Triodos Bank has supported for more than 20 years, with projects as far afield as the west coast of Scotland and Snowdonia.
“Hydro-electricity is not only one of the oldest forms of green energy, it is also one of the most sustainable,” explains Steve Moore, senior relationship manager in our Business Banking Environment Team.
“This is one of the reasons that makes hydro an attractive investment proposition and we continue to be an active lender in the sector.”
Many projects supported by Triodos Bank are ‘high head’ schemes which capture a water high up a mountain stream and deliver it, via a buried pipeline, to a turbine in the valley or glen far below.
Triodos Bank has also financed a number of innovative ‘low head’ schemes across the UK where, as the name suggests, projects utilise a large flow of water dropping a relatively short distance.
One of these developments, the Knottingley Hydropower Station on the River Aire near Wakefield in West Yorkshire, was developed by Triodos Bank customer Northern Hydropower.
The scheme completed in late 2017, and at 500kW is the largest low head scheme built in England this century.
The project utilises an existing weir to deliver a large flow over a low head of 2.63 metres, via two Kaplan turbines. Prior to construction, the developer worked closely with the Environment Agency and landowner the Canal and River Trust to incorporate a multiple-flight fish pass into the design – enabling fish to bypass the weir and travel upstream for the first time in more than a century.
Each year the scheme will generate enough electricity to power the equivalent of 700 homes – however in this case nearly all of the power supplied by the hydro station is being used by the neighbouring Kings Island Flour Mill located just the other side of the river.
“This was a great scheme to work on and brings in a lot of innovative thinking,” explains Steve.
“Unlike many hydro schemes, where the power is fed directly into the National Grid, here the developer Northern Hydropower built a private wire straight from the hydro station to the flour mill in order to supply electricity directly to the customer via a long-term corporate PPA (power purchase agreement).
“This works well for the flour mill, which gets a steady supply of affordable green energy, and secures a long-term guaranteed income stream for Northern Hydropower,” Steve says.
In addition, the hydro plant also uses a large commercial battery to store excess generation which can then be delivered to the National Grid in short, premium-priced bursts to help stabilise the grid network, in what is known as the fast frequency response market. This creates a further income stream for the Knottingley plant.