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Pulse Clean Energy unveils new battery storage facility in Aberdare as part of £175m investment

It forms part of a £175m investment and will be able to power nearly 50,000 homes for two hours

The new battery storage facility in Aberdare from Pulse Clean Energy.

Pulse Clean Energy has launched a new battery storage facility in Aberdare at part of a £175m investment programme. The energy storage and grid stability specialist acquired what was original a diesel power energy generating plant at Hirwaun Industrial Estate for the purpose of converting it into a battery storage system.

With a peak output of 21.76 megawatts, the facility can power over 48,000 homes for two hours.

It marks Pulse Clean Energy’s first two-hour duration battery, which it said will play a key role in enhancing grid stability by storing excess energy generated during periods of high renewable output and releasing it back to the grid when demand is high.

This will help National Grid Electricity System Operator (NESO) to manage the grid.

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The Hirwaun project is the fifth of nine sites that Pulse Clean Energy is converting from diesel generating sites to grid-scale battery storage assets. The project represents a broader strategy to repurpose legacy infrastructure for cleaner, more sustainable energy solutions.

The exact level of investment at Aberdare has not been disclosed, but was financed using Pulse Clean Energy’s £175m credit facility with Santander, CIBC, Investec, and the National Wealth Fund, alongside equity from the Investment Management Corporation of Ontario (IMCO).

Pulse Clean Energy was advised by Eversheds (legal), Everose (technical support), and Fichtner Consulting Engineers (technical through design and engineering).