Foresight Group and the UK Green Investment Bank (GIB) have announced an investment in the construction of a new waste wood CHP facility in Merseyside, UK.
The 20.2 MWe and 7.8 MWth CHP plant will be powered by 146,000 tonnes of Grade B-C recovered wood each year, sourced by Stobart Biomass Products Limited (Stobart) under a long-term fuel supply contract. The facility will be providing power to the grid and the heat offtake will be used by Stobart's adjacent wood drying facility. See infographic here.
It will be built within the Mersey Multimodal Gateway project, a 180 hectare logistics hub, just west of Liverpool.
The project, which is expected to become operational by December 2016, will be amongst the largest power plants of its type in the UK, and is the largest waste wood plant in the North West.
The plant will be built and operated by Danish power plant specialist Burmeister & Wain Scandinavian Contractor A/S, and over its expected 20-year lifetime, the facility is forecast to:
The total project investment is estimated at £110 million (US$172.1 million). GIB is providing £16.9 million of mezzanine loans and also making a £13.2m equity investment, via its Foresight-managed fund, UK Waste Resources & Energy Investments (UKWREI), in which it is the cornerstone investor. The remainder of the £42.1 million mezzanine finance is being provided by GCP Infrastructure Investors.
Investec Bank plc and Eksport Kredit Fonden (EKF) have together committed £42.5 million of senior loans, while Stobart and BWSC will both take an equity stake with commitments of £9.8 million and £2.6 million respectively.
This project has brought together the same investors who are behind the construction of the 15 MW CHP Evermore Renewable Energy project in Northern Ireland, announced by GIB and Foresight in July 2013.