Plans Submitted for Renewable-led Energy Centre in Liverpool to Help Heat Homes and Businesses

15 Dec 2020

Energy Centre CGI Sherwood Street (Peel LP)

Peel L&P Energy has submitted plans to develop an energy centre in Liverpool with renewable technologies to help provide low carbon heat and hot water to residents and businesses in the area.  

The facility between Great Howard Street and Sherwood Street is expected to save around 4,200 tonnes of carbon per year achieved through the primary use of water source heat pumps and thermal stores to help power Peel L&P’s Mersey Heat district heat network.  

The application, made to Liverpool City Council, includes plans for two 3MW water source heat pumps which would work on an ‘open loop’ system to take heat from water abstracted from the Leeds/Liverpool canal before pumping it back into the waterway.   

Elevated visualisation of the proposed energy centre looking north west from Sherwood Street. 

Two thermal stores capable of holding 260 cubic metres of hot water would also be installed alongside heat only gas boilers with a combined capacity of up to 40MW as a backup, and during times of peak demand.  

The first phase of Mersey Heat will provide heat for up to 9,000 homes and 4m sq ft of commercial space at Peel L&P’s Liverpool Waters development with connections to buildings at Stanley Docks in the pipeline. The project is part funded by the Merseyside Pension Fund. 

Darran Lawless, Development Director for Liverpool Waters, said: “These plans are a fantastic step forward in us delivering a sustainable community for those living and working in and around Liverpool Waters. 

“It is also great that we can offer low cost, low carbon heat to a development of this magnitude.”  

Jonathan Burley, Commercial Director at Peel L&P Energy said: “This new facility will use renewable technologies as the main energy source to help power the Mersey Heat network and connect homes and offices to low carbon heat and hot water.  

“It supports the UK’s goal of becoming net zero by 2050 as well as Liverpool City Region’s climate emergency targets.  As new technology develops, we hope to decarbonise the network further, making the city an even cleaner and greener place to live.” 

Pending planning approval, the energy centre would be due to start on site mid-next year.

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