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Insider UK
National
Peter A Walker

Scotland’s oldest university launches solar farm

The University of St Andrews has unveiled its new solar farm at its Eden Campus.

The one-megawatt ground solar photovoltaic development - backed by a Scottish Funding Council loan and supported by the Vacant & Derelict Land Fund from the Scottish Government and Fife Council - will provide electricity to the campus.

The move further reduces the university’s overall carbon footprint by approximately 5%.

With a planned extension of its district heating network, which already pipes hot water from its £25m biomass plant to 48 university buildings and 3000 student rooms - and the solar farm, the expectation is that the Eden Campus will be carbon-neutral within the next five years.

In addition to providing power to Walter Bower House and other buildings on the campus, the electrical supply will be utilised by electric vehicle charging points and the installation of battery storage.

Economy Secretary Kate Forbes, who opened the solar project, said: “The leadership shown by the University of St Andrews in transforming the Eden Campus into a vibrant centre of green innovation and job creation will ensure further opportunities for the university to harness green energy and drive inclusive growth in the local economy.

“These projects are not only an important step in the journey for the Eden Campus to become carbon neutral, but it is also an important step in helping Scotland meet the ambitious goal of being net zero by 2045.”

University principal and vice-chancellor Sally Mapstone said: “We are committed to a programme of decarbonisation, the efficient use of heat and water resources across our estate, as well as a deep-seated institutional commitment to all forms of environmental degradation by 2035, including through sustainable practice and policy.

“St Andrews is also at the heart of world-leading research into harnessing green energy, including the development of hydrogen trains, which has resulted in a strong relationship between the School of Chemistry and the Eden Campus as a scale-up site for research and development, as well as being the university’s front door for commercial collaboration with more than 100 companies engaging in the site since 2020.”

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