£130 Million Long-Duration Energy Storage Could Help Transform Renewable Energy Sector
A major milestone for UK renewable energy infrastructure has been reached as Highview Power confirms £130 million in funding to begin construction of a long-duration energy storage facility at Hunterston, Ayrshire.
The project, which uses liquid-air energy storage (LAES) technology, represents one of the UK’s most significant investments in grid stability to date, supporting the transition to a low-carbon energy system capable of balancing the growing share of wind and solar generation on the grid.
Building Resilience into the Renewable Energy System
Notably located on the site of a former coal-fired power station, the Hunterston facility is designed to store surplus renewable energy and release it when demand is higher, helping to stabilise the grid and reduce reliance on gas-fired generation.
With up to 3.2 GWh of storage capacity, the plant will provide critical system services including voltage and frequency control; functions that have traditionally been supplied by fossil-fuel infrastructure.
The investment, led by the Scottish National Investment Bank and Centrica, reflects a growing focus on long-duration energy storage as a practical solution to one of the UK’s biggest energy challenges: managing intermittency without compromising reliability.
A Broader Shift for the Renewable Sector
For the wider renewable energy and infrastructure sectors, the Hunterston project signals more than just a technology success story; it reflects the increasing interdependence between energy generation, storage, and grid infrastructure, and the importance of joined-up project planning to make that system work.
As large-scale energy storage moves from concept to construction, new layers of complexity emerge: from planning and environmental approvals to engineering coordination and commissioning. For developers and contractors, this demands not only technical precision but also a deeper understanding of how individual assets fit into the wider national network.
What It Means for the Future
Highview’s Hunterston project sets a precedent for how the UK can balance its growing renewable portfolio with a stronger, more flexible grid.
It also highlights how public and private investment can work together to deliver the infrastructure needed for a cleaner, more resilient energy system.
As renewable capacity continues to expand, long-duration storage will play an essential role in maintaining reliability, reducing curtailment, and ensuring that low-carbon power is available when and where it’s needed.
This latest development is a clear sign that the UK’s energy transition is entering a new, more integrated phase: one where storage, generation, and infrastructure operate in harmony to deliver sustainable, stable power for decades to come.
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