ESB’s Smart Energy Services will provide an innovative energy solution for a world-first £120m greenhouse project, including the installation of the largest installed capacity of heat pumps in the UK.
Smart Energy Services – a business unit in ESB – has been deployed by Greencoat Capital to design, install and manage the combined heat pump (CHP) plants for what will be the UK’s largest and most sustainable agricultural greenhouse sites in Norfolk and Suffolk.
This project is set to provide the model for decarbonising agriculture and heat, using large scale energy solutions as an alternative to fossil fuel heated glasshouses. Once constructed, the greenhouses will provide ideal growing conditions for a range of plants and vegetables requiring high-heat, and relatively low-light environments such as tomatoes, cucumbers and peppers, over a total of 177km of grower gutters.
Commenting on the innovative project, Ciaran Gallagher, Head of Smart Energy Services for ESB, said: “Enabling the electrification of heat is a key part of ESB’s Brighter Future strategy and we are committed to ongoing support and investment in this area, such as this exciting project with Greencoat Capital.
Through ESB’s Smart Energy Services management of this greenhouse project, we are providing a viable low-carbon solution to significantly help reduce the emissions from a large-scale project. As with all other large energy users that we work with, this offering allows the greenhouses to reduce its carbon emission footprint.”
The two greenhouse sites will cover 29 hectares, equating to the size of almost 20 Croke Park pitches. The combined heat and power plants will generate electricity for the heat pumps and will also provide supplementary CO2 to accelerate crop growth recapturing a high proportion of carbon created. All the electricity and heat produced by the CHP units will be utilised on site, making them some of the most efficient units installed in the UK.
ESB’s Smart Energy Services open-loop heat pump solution will transfer heat from the nearby water recycling centre to the greenhouses, with the additional benefit of cooling the facility’s treated water outflow before it is returned to the environment.
The construction phase of the project is set to begin immediately, with completion expected in Autumn 2020.