![]() ![]() ![]() Reflecting investors’ surging enthusiasm for grid-scale batteries, NESF will now seek shareholders permission, via its investment advisors NextEnergy Capital, to lift an existing ceiling capping its investment in batteries to 10% of its asset portfolio. The PV and battery plays are among group assets valued without audit at £1.2 billion as of June. ![]() a 6MW battery project co-located at North Norfolk Solar Farm.50MWp ready-to-build at Hatherden, Hampshire.36MWp at Whitecross, Lincolnshire under construction.260MWp of co-investments in Iberian solar projects, currently under construction.100 operating PV sites in the UK and Italy.Next Energy’s 0.865GW base of solar assets operated or under construction includes: JVP2 is NESF’s vehicle, quarter-shared as from today with its anguilliformed – nothing to do with the Caribbean island – buddies.Īcross both partnerships, the couple have thus pledged £300 million towards a pipeline ”under exclusivity” of future storage projects, measured at over 0.5GW and described this morning as “high-quality”. Ownership of what the financiers today term JVP2 will be split 75:25 in the fund’s favour. That project is due to hook into the national grid before July 2023. The so-called JVP1 made its separate debut last year, in the form of a 50MW storage device now under construction in Fife. Today’s deal doubles up on an existing £100 million venture between the pair. Clean electricity investors Next Energy Solar Fund have formed a £ 200 million storage partnership, its second with grid-scale battery engineers Eelpower. ![]()
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