Ørsted has entered its first solar project in the United Kingdom. One Earth Solar Farm is a proposed 740-MW solar farm with associated battery storage, that will primarily be in Nottinghamshire near the border of Lincolnshire. It is being co-developed with PS Renewables.
Once operational, the 740-MW solar farm will generate enough clean, renewable electricity to power up to 200,000 homes, making it one of the largest solar farms in the country. Subject to local and stakeholder consultation, which will begin later this month as part of the process for nationally significant infrastructure projects, a development consent order submission is planned for 2025.
Ørsted is taking a phased ownership in the project with the achievement of key milestones. PS Renewables and Ørsted are targeting a commercial operation date for the One Earth Solar Farm before 2030. The renewable electricity produced by the solar farm has several potential routes to market including contracts for difference and corporate power purchase agreements.
The project will contribute to Ørsted’s global ambition of reaching 17.5 GW of onshore capacity by 2030. Ørsted currently has more than 5.7 GW of onshore renewables in operation, under construction, or consented across the United States and Europe.
Solar energy is crucial to diversifying and balancing energy generation and reducing reliance on fossil fuels. The UK government has set a clear target to increase solar capacity by nearly fivefold, to 70 GW by 2035, as part of wider plans to power Britain with cleaner, cheaper, and more secure energy sources.
“With a strong Irish onshore portfolio already in place, we are delighted to begin our journey in the UK solar market with PS Renewables, who have been successfully delivering large-scale solar projects for more than a decade,” said Kieran White, senior vice president of onshore in Region Europe at Ørsted.
“Ørsted is committed to investing in a variety of renewable energy sources to ensure reliability and independence of supply,” said Duncan Clark, senior vice president and head of UK and Ireland at Ørsted. “We welcome the UK government’s ambition to install 70 GW of solar capacity by 2035 and look forward to working with the government’s new Solar Taskforce and stakeholders from across the industry to maximize the benefits that solar energy offers to the nation.”
The entry in to the One Earth project is the latest stage of Ørsted’s investment in onshore renewable energy in the UK and Ireland, following the announcement of Ørsted’s first solar farm in Ireland at Ballinrea (65 MW) near Carrigaline in Cork and the acquisition of the 160-MW Garreenleen project earlier this year, bringing Ireland’s solar pipeline to a total in excess of 600 MW. Ørsted already operates 420 MW of onshore wind in the UK and Ireland, producing enough green electricity to power more than 275,000 homes.