º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Enterprise

Devon renewable energy firm developing large solar farms in Brazil sees exports surge

Lisarb Energy is aiming to tap into Latin America’s growing renewable energy market

Solar farm(Image: Kelly Lacy/Pexels)

A Devon firm has established itself as one of Brazil’s fastest growing solar energy providers and expects to generate sales of £125m to the South American country during the next five years.

Lisarb Energy, develops, constructs, finances and manages large scale solar farms across Latin America’s largest county in a bid to provide alternative sources of clean power to some of its leading corporations.

The company, which is based in Barnstaple and also has operations in London and Rio de Janeiro, currently has one operational site with seven in development and a further two under construction.

Lisarb Energy's chairman Jamie MacDonald-Murray co-founded the company in 2017, having identified a need to replace falling electrical generation capacity from Brazil’s hydroelectric plants.

Mr MacDonald-Murray explained: “Historically, 70% of Brazil’s energy has come from hydroelectric power plants. While hydro is a renewable source of power, unfortunately there are increasing problems with these plants.

“Many of them are getting old and failing because of lack of investment; frequent droughts mean that water levels are often too low to generate sufficient power, and fundamentally, many hydro plants are in the wrong place – too far from where the energy is consumed. In practical terms, people and businesses are experiencing more frequent blackouts.”

Over the last year the company has grown its exports to Brazil by 500%, while over the past 18 months it has grown its solar portfolio from 50MW to 3GW.

Market research firm Mordor Intelligence has forecast that the renewable energy market in Brazil to grow by a compound annual rate of more than 5% between the period 2020-2025.