https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BB5F7OI0LEC
“It has been an experience of your life to let everyone look at you while you take something first,” says Rosalind Smith Maxwell, director of Quinbrook Infrastructure Partners, working on the Cleve Hill Solar Plant.
The first nationally important infrastructure project of the VK (NSIP), the 373MW Cleve Hill Solar site is the first of its kind that reached every milestone past its realization.
Speakingly organized in a webinar by Solar Power Portal, Maxwell explained that, after he started working on a project that was double the size of Cleve Hill in the US, only 18 months before he took on the NSIP, “we knew we had the expertise to record something of this scale”.
“But when you supply 373 MW or 560,000 panels, it takes a village – you raise that child.”
Maxwell says that everyone involved in the project had to be brave and patient during the entire process. It took five years since he has granted a development assignment (DCO) (DCO) to reach the construction of the solar energy plant of the solar energy plant.
Cleve Hill is the only NSIP under construction. Maxwell says that because of her mathematics we need around 85 Cleve Hills, and with less than five years to 2030, “there is a lot of knowledge exchange and a lot of construction to go”.
From the clean capacity of the government 2030, which includes an ambition to have 47 GW of solar generation installed, Maxwell says: “We must consider them as ambitious goals that will not be achieved.
“By having a very strong and ambitious target, I hope to see significant investments in the supply chain, because I do not believe that we have enough competent work to deliver the projects.”
Maxwell says that we are in a “strange moment of Flux”, where the government’s strong ambition does not change that “we have the real world challenges in delivering that ambition”.
“Without sharing the knowledge, I think we will find it very difficult to prevent a series of missteps that will lead to a suboptimal delivery of the target.”
The main analyst of Solar Media Market Research presented Josh Cornes the state of the British market for large-scale, transmission-connected solar energy.
The majority of capacity at that level is ‘at best skeptical’, he says, and he identifies around 33 GW of projects that continue to become more realistic prospects, either on planning, with a DCO page or a website that identifies their land rights.
More than 25 projects have been submitted in the English planning inspection for large-scale solar projects of a total of more than 11GWP, with the Scottish Energy Constent Unit for seven projects of more than 80 MWp, a total of 800 MWp, and in Wales there are currently two developments of national significance, a total of 360 MW.
Cornes says: “Although things will be tight in the coming four and a half years, there will be enormous potential for large-scale solar sun after 2030; with the announcement that distribution and transmission-connected projects will fall into the same pot [for grid connections]Transmission scale developers have certainly been heard. “
View the full webinar to see Maxwell’s comments about the financing of Cleve Hill and a Q&A.
Both Rosalind Smith Maxwell and Josh Cornes will speak on 1-2 July on the UK Solar Summit. View the agenda and book tickets here– Use our exclusive discount code SPP20 For a 20% discount on your ticket!
