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UK ESS investor Gresham House acquires 425MW of projects, plans US$140 million share offer

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Glassenbury, one of Gresham House Energy Storage Fund’s earlier UK battery storage acquisitions. Image: Gresham House.

Publicly-listed UK energy storage investment fund Gresham House Energy Storage Fund (GRID) is on track to own more than 1.2GW of operational battery energy storage systems after securing a deal to acquire 425MW of projects from its Gresham House Devco and expanding its exclusive pipeline by a further 427MW.

Of the newly acquired assets, 275MW are proceeding into the construction phase, with commissioning targeted for Q1 2022, while the remaining 150MW will be built subject to funding and other conditions. Gresham House DevCo is the development subsidiary of parent company Gresham House, a specialist asset management group. 

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Additionally, to take advantage of what it describes as “the compelling market opportunity for battery energy storage system projects” in the UK, GRID has announced a proposed placing to raise approximately £100 million (US$138 million) through an issue of new ordinary shares, with proceeds intended to finance new projects.

Ben Guest, lead fund manager and head of GRID, said the company’s increasing economies of scale allow it to boost its deployment rate while reducing build costs, adding: “We recently set out ambitious plans to significantly increase the size of our portfolio over the next two years, given the UK's need to increase battery storage capacity tenfold by the middle of this decade.”

The acquired assets include seven battery projects located across England and Scotland that have capacities ranging from 30MW to 100MW. The full list is below.

Project Location Export capacity (MW) Commissioning date
Melksham East & West England 100 Q1 2022
Enderby England 50 Q1 2022
West Didsbury England 50 Q1 2022
Coupar Angus Scotland 40 Q1 2022
Arbroath Scotland 35 Q1 2022
Grendon England 100 H2 2022
Penwortham England 50 H2 2022

It is expected the projects in the subsequent 427MW pipeline will be built by the end of Q1 2023, subject to funding and other conditions, with most being commissioned by the end of 2022.

The latest expansion follows GRID’s acquisitions this year of a 25MW operational battery in Tynemouth in North East England, another 35MW battery project in nearby Tyne and Wear and a 10MW project in Essex, South East England.

Last year, GRID added 141MW of operational storage capacity, consisting of the 41MW Bloxwich, 50MW Thurcroft and 50MW Wickham Market projects. As of March this year, the company had 395MW of operational storage accross 15 projects.

This story first appeared on Solar Power Portal

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