Solar project to deliver carbon benefits at Helensburgh WWTW

Helensburgh WWTW

WORK is complete on a £300,000 project in Helensburgh designed to help make the treatment of the town’s waste water less carbon intensive.

384 ground-mounted solar panels have been installed at the town’s Waste Water Treatment Works (WWTW), which are expected to generate around 0.21 GWh of electricity annually. This is tipped to meet 26% of the site’s energy needs, as well as saving 43 tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent a year. A proportion of the green energy produced by the scheme will be sold back to the grid.

The project has been led by Scottish Water Horizons, the publicly owned utility’s commercial subsidiary, and delivered by R&A Group.

Scottish Water Horizons project manager Brian James said, “We’re delighted to have completed work on this solar project and to have added Helensburgh WWTW to our growing portfolio of sites which are powered in part by some form of renewable energy. These projects are key to helping decarbonise the vital processes we all rely on to treat our water and waste water across Scotland.”

Local Scottish Water operations team leader George O’Sullivan added, “Treating waste water is an energy intensive process and it is great that a quarter of the power we use at Helensburgh WWTW is now made up of green energy. The scheme helps to maximise the space available at the site and takes us that bit closer to our net zero targets.”