Shrewsbury
Energy Storage Project

What is a Battery Energy Storage System (BESS) and why do we need it?

Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS) store excess electricity until sold into the National Grid to meet industrial or domestic electricity demands. Our BESS assets help level out expensive peaks and troughs of electricity pricing caused by supply and demand imbalance.

We are proposing this project to help meet the increasingly critical need to stabilise the UK electricity grid.  As older, non-renewable fuels are being decommissioned, renewable energy sources are being connected to the UK’s grid instead. Energy storage projects like this are vital to maximise on the intermittently produced energy from wind and solar farms.

L48 Communities | Dams of Craigie Energy Storage Project | Renewable Energy

Renewable Energy

The energy system is the backbone of modern society. To deliver on the transition to net zero whilst continuing to deliver for consumers, a whole energy system approach and strategic change is required across all fuels, renewable energy, and this includes Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS).

Renewable energy generation does not always match periods of high electrical demand and its generation is intermittent. We can only rely on its generation when there is wind or direct sunshine. Energy storage assets are required by the National Grid so that it can counteract the constraints and limitations that green, renewable generation can have on the UK’s grid.

Battery Energy Storage Systems allow the UK to increase the proportion of low carbon and zero carbon generation used to power the electricity network.

Projects such as this one in Shrewsbury are critical in helping ensure that the UK meets its objectives of becoming a net zero greenhouse gas emitting nation by 2050.

What we do

Lower 48 Energy is a UK based business that operates across the Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS) landscape.

Our engineers study the entire National Grid and the local Distribution Network Operators grids to identify viable and advantageous locations to build battery assets. Once we have identified a location, we then work with our planning teams to establish the exact location of the sites that would be sympathetic to building out an asset.

Our inhouse team of rural surveyors then approach prospective landowners and explain a proposition. Lower 48 Energy then apply to the National Grid and the Distribution Network Operators for a grid connection. If granted, we then apply for Planning Permission to build the asset. The construction of a typical Battery Energy Storage System will take about 9 months to build and commission. Once commissioned the facility will be ‘operated’ remotely from a dedicated office that monitors the facility 24/7/365, helping to keep the UK’s lights on.

Our Process

Early Development

This stage of the project is now complete. A Grid Connection Offer from National Grid has been secured and a planning consultant has been engaged to support early site investigation work.

Pre Planning

We are currently engaging with stakeholders in advance of the submission of a planning application.

Planning Application

We aim to submit a planning application to shROPSHIRE coUNCIL BY THE END OF 2024.

Consented

If Shropshire Council deems the development to be acceptable, we are likely to see consent being granted in the first half of 2025.

In Construction

If it goes ahead, the construction of this project is likely to start in 2028.

Operational

If it goes ahead, Lower 48 energy will manage the financial operation of the site and oversee the maintenance, insurance and compliance.