Solar power for Wolverhampton’s New Cross Hospital

Lucy Dixon
08.03.2024

A solar farm which will power Wolverhampton’s New Cross Hospital for three quarters of the year is set to be up and running this spring.

The Royal Wolverhampton NHS Trust (RWT) in partnership with City of Wolverhampton Council, has built the solar farm at a former landfill site the size of 22 football pitches, adjacent to Bentley Way, Wednesfield. It is set to open in April.

The facility will power the entire hospital site with self-generated renewable energy for around 288 days a year. This will save the Trust around £15-20 million over the next 20 years – money which will be put back into frontline healthcare.

More than 15,000 electricity generating solar panels have been installed at the site by main contractor Vital Energi. Work to secure the 40-plus acre brownfield site included protecting badger setts, and removing methane.

Stew Watson, Director of Estates Development at RWT, said:

This investment is a huge boost to help us achieve that.

Our primary focus is always on the patient and these works ensure the Trust saves money on future energy bills, which we can then subsequently invest across other healthcare services.

Professor David Loughton CBE, Group Chief Executive at RWT, said:

As the largest employer in Wolverhampton, we take sustainability very seriously and are committed to continually working to reduce our carbon footprint.

We have taken a number of steps to reduce and better manage our energy consumption and operate in a sustainable manner.

One of these steps is to look at using renewable energy so we are very pleased the development will be opening soon and delighted at the way the partnerships have worked out.

Ashley Malin, Managing Director at Vital Energi, added:

We’re delighted to have transformed a former coal mine and landfill site into this impressive solar farm, which is the largest single source of green energy on a hospital site within the UK.

The clean energy will power the air source heat pumps within the hospital, and significantly reduce the hospital’s carbon footprint.

Work has also been completed on the underground cabling to connect the hospital to the solar farm.

RWT has received around £15m in grant funding for the project. This comprised contributions from the government’s Levelling-Up fund, the NHS and Salix Finance, a government-funded body.

The trust also received a further £33m to carry out green energy works as part of the Department of Business, Energy, and Industrial Strategy’s Public Sector Decarbonisation Scheme.

Vital Energi will be at InstallerSHOW 2024, running from 25 to 27 June at the NEC. Register for FREE tickets here: installer-2024-splash.reg.buzz