Social enterprise aims to power some commuter trains with solar energy, with government backing, as Britain aims for net-zero emissions
By Lin Taylor
LONDON, Nov 23 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Solar power will be used on a major railway line into London from early 2022, the company behind the project said on Monday, as Britain aims for net-zero emissions within three decades.
Riding Sunbeams, a social enterprise, said it would use a 2.5-million pound ($3.34-million) government grant to build a community-owned solar farm to help power trains on the line that links the capital with the southern seaside town of Eastbourne.
"It's a fantastic opportunity to show the UK rail sector that commercial innovation can help power us all to the zero carbon future we need," Executive Director Ollie Pendered said in a statement.
The project is a partnership with Network Rail, which operates and develops Britain's railway infrastructure and is the country's biggest single electricity user.
Renewable energy is already used to power some of the country's railways, and Network Rail estimates that solar could provide 10% of the energy needed to run its trains, mostly on tracks in southeast England.
Once the 3.75-megawatt (MW) Cuckmere solar farm is complete, ownership will be given to the local community and commuters, according to Riding Sunbeams - a joint project between climate charity Possible and campaign group Community Energy South.
Riding Beams piloted the scheme on tracks in Aldershot in southern England last year - calling it the world's first solar-powered railway.
In October, Britain's HS1 railway link between London and the Channel Tunnel became the country's first train line to run entirely on renewable energy - with wind and solar powering trains on the route, the operating company said.
Riding Beams said it was working with Welsh train-operating company Transport for Wales and the capital's Transport for London and hopes to replicate its business model throughout the country in partnership with Network Rail.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson last week laid out a 10-point plan for a "green industrial revolution", which he said would create up to a quarter of a million jobs through measures such as expanding offshore wind power.
The plan also included a ban on sales of combustion engine cars by 2030, as well as support for hydrogen and nuclear power.
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($1 = 0.7484 pounds) (Reporting by Lin Taylor @linnytayls; Editing by Helen Popper. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers the lives of people around the world who struggle to live freely or fairly. Visit http://news.trust.org to see more stories.)
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