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Does a New Dawn Await Scotland’s Grid Infrastructure?

Published: Tuesday, May 20, 2025

Whether you are an energy developer, an energy dependent business, a property developer requiring energy connections, or a business with a decarbonisation target, it is important to know what is happening in the energy sector at the key grid and delivery infrastructure levels. Owners of land targeted for such development also take note. Locational signals and government support schemes will impact the timing, pricing, location and availability of such decarbonised developments and services.

Against the background of ‘Invest 2025: the UK’s modern industrial strategy’, the UK Government has included key elements to drive further growth in renewables developments and low carbon opportunities.

Critical to any government’s plans is having the physical and political framework to achieve this, while providing bankable opportunities to developers and investors. Included in the strategy is the continuing need to enhance the grid reach and capacity. There is also the need to manage competition for connections, to deliver longer term energy storage solutions for renewables generation offering flexibility and balance to the grid reducing reliance on fossil fuel base and reactive loads.

Grid Connection Reform: There is a groundbreaking strategic project (recently given the green light by Ofgem) led by the National Energy System Operator (NESO) to reform the connections queue to join future development to the Transmission and Distribution grids based on a readiness criteria check.

This has implications for both developers and landowners currently coping with immediate pressure to secure land options, and progress consents, just to stay in the existing queue.

There will be more clarity for existing offers by September and for future offers that are processed over the next 12 months.

Long Duration Energy Storage (LDES): There is an urgent requirement for growth in LDES developments (Batteries; Pumped Storage Hydro (PSH), Hydrogen and liquid/compressed air technologies potentially) to support energy security and flexibility needs, as well as decarbonisation, incentivised by a Cap and Floor scheme.

Ofgem has recently set out how this scheme will operate for projects deliverable by 2030 or 2033.  Depending on their technical readiness, technologies applying for the Scheme must exceed 50MW or 100MW deliverable to the system continuously for a minimum of eight hours.

The floor represents a minimum guaranteed income to encourage market funding to be released for such critical capital-intensive developments, while the cap is intended to share excess income to benefit the wider system and its consumers.

An excellent example of a project of this kind is the Coire Glas 1300MW PSH scheme, the first such project proposed in the UK for over 40 years, estimated to power c.3m homes for 24 hours.

Hydrogen/Power to X: The trends we are seeing across the GB energy market, include the continued growth of multi-source energy co-located with storage and Power to X (conversion of excess renewable electricity to other forms of energy which may be stored/transported), although that appetite must now compete in the grid queue.

A positive trend is emerging to develop green (from renewables onshore and offshore) and blue (from decarbonised natural gas) hydrogen supplies to create a networked supply at least in regional hubs, if not wider.

An example of this would be the H2 Caledonia campaign. Hydrogen Allocation Rounds (HAR), (Round 2 of which has recently nominated 27 ‘eligible applicants’ out of 87), are in play to encourage Low Carbon Hydrogen Production targeting 10GW by 2030.

Derek McCulloch
Gillespie Macandrew
Country:
Scotland, UK
Practice Area:
Energy
Phone Number:
07718979850
Fax:
Derek has over 20 years of experience advising and counselling global and domestic businesses on their major corporate, land and energy projects on a UK and international level. Derek has project managed the delivery of legal services on several infrastructure and renewable energy projects both onshore and offshore, each valued in the hundreds of millions. Recently, he has led and advised on several significant M&A deals and strategic energy portfolio investments including the sale of Rio Tinto’s UK Smelter and power operations. He has a track record in advising on natural resource regulation, low carbonisation projects, university commercialisation, and complex joint venture and consortium deals. He is a non-executive board member and trustee for a number of organisations and up to March 2020, held the position of Honorary Consul of the Republic of Korea in Scotland. Derek co-ordinates international cross border projects and trade and is Chair of the global legal network, Lexwork International in Europe and Asia. Clients comment that he provides a real understanding of all sides of every issue, as well as possessing great business acumen and an innate appreciation of project risk. Sector experience includes: UK external legal advice lead on M&A sale of Rio Tinto UK Smelter & Power operations in Scotland and England (£330m) Co-ordinating external legal advice on c.450MW Viking Energy Wind Farm project on Shetland Co-ordinating Scottish legal advice on acquisition of 49% share of 24 wind farms with global capacity of 550MW in deal worth c.£700m. Scottish adviser on off shoring and on shoring ownership of strategic land assets Project lead for land corridor legal issues to link 1.5GW offshore wind farm Legal advice lead on sale of key Scottish assets for global food ingredients business Formula One and European Athletics Sponsorship contracts Regulatory advice on private legislation for large hydro schemes and Electricity Regime Adviser on major energy plant and steel components cross border supply (£50m) UK advisor and co-ordinator of Indian legal advice on a social project as part of India’s 100million toilets project to offer privacy and promote feminine hygiene AREAS OF EXPERTISE: Energy Real Estate Corporate

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