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Climate

Qualitas Energy launches statutory consultation for Heolddu Solar Farm

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QUALITAS ENERGY has launched the statutory consultation for its proposed Heolddu Solar Farm, a 40 MW fixed-panel project to be built on two parcels of land between Ferryside and Llandyfaelog.

The scheme follows an initial consultation in March, where feedback from residents led to a number of changes in the design.

If approved, the solar farm is expected to generate enough renewable electricity in its first year to power around 10,770 homes, cutting carbon emissions by almost 10,000 tonnes annually. That output is more than sufficient to meet Carmarthenshire County Council’s target of 8,222 new homes by 2033.

Contributing to Wales’ energy goals

The Heolddu project would make a significant contribution towards the Welsh Government’s target of meeting 100% of electricity demand from renewable sources by 2035. Currently, renewable generation accounts for just 53% of Wales’ needs – which, given rising demand, equates to only 27% of the projected requirement by 2035.

By connecting directly to existing power lines running through the site, the solar farm would avoid the need for new large-scale grid infrastructure such as additional pylons.

Community benefits

Qualitas Energy has pledged a community benefit fund worth up to £800,000 over the 40-year lifetime of the project. This would provide £20,000 annually for local projects. A dedicated workshop with local stakeholders was held in June to identify potential priorities for funding.

Public consultation events

Two drop-in information events will be held to give residents the chance to review the updated plans and share their views:

  • Monday 13 October 2025, 2:00pm–7:00pm – Calon y Fferi Community Centre, Carmarthen Road, Ferryside, SA17 5TE
  • Tuesday 14 October 2025, 2:00pm–7:00pm – Llandyfaelog Village Hall, Llandyfaelog, Kidwelly, SA17 5PA

The statutory consultation will remain open until Thursday 30 October 2025. Feedback, along with the results of environmental and technical surveys, will be used to refine the application before it is submitted to Planning and Environment Decisions Wales (PEDW) later this year.

As the project exceeds 10 MW, it qualifies as a Development of National Significance (DNS) and will be determined by PEDW following further consultation.

Company statement

Rachel Ness, Planning Director at Qualitas Energy UK, said: “Qualitas Energy is committed to being a force for good for our neighbours as we accelerate the green energy transition across Wales. We have already undertaken extensive consultation around the Heolddu site to understand local concerns and opportunities, and we look forward to meeting residents again to explain the changes we’ve made. Their feedback will help us further refine the project before submitting our application.”

About Qualitas Energy

Qualitas Energy is a global investment and management platform focused on renewable energy, the energy transition, and sustainable infrastructure. Since 2006, the company has committed more than €14 billion to the sector worldwide. Its portfolio includes 11 GW of renewable assets at different stages of development, spanning solar PV, wind, hydro, storage, renewable natural gas, and concentrated solar power (CSP).

The company employs around 530 staff across 15 offices in Europe, North America, and South America, including teams in London, Bristol, and Edinburgh.

For more information visit heolddusolar.co.uk or contact Holly Simons at [email protected].

 

Climate

Breaking down barriers between finance and industry in offshore renewables sector

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EARLIER this week, Marine Energy Wales brought together senior representatives from national and devolved finance institutions with developers, ports and supply-chain companies operating across Wales’ offshore renewable energy sector for a dedicated finance roundtable in Pembroke Dock. Attendance was limited to premium MEW members to allow for frank, focused discussion.

The session was intentionally designed to be different.

Rather than relying on formal presentations or sales pitches, the roundtable created a facilitated, closed-door space for open dialogue. Finance organisations were able to explain clearly how they operate, what types of projects they can support, and where constraints still exist. Industry participants, in turn, set out the real-world challenges they are facing across tidal energy, floating offshore wind, port infrastructure and supply-chain development.

What emerged was more than information sharing—it was a clearer, shared understanding of how decisions are made on both sides.

From siloed conversations to shared problem-solving

A consistent theme from the discussion was that significant public and institutional finance is now available to support clean energy projects. However, navigating that landscape remains complex, particularly for early-stage developments, smaller supply-chain businesses and emerging technologies.

By bringing the right people into the room at the same time, the roundtable helped to:

  • demystify how different finance bodies assess risk, scale and project readiness
  • highlight where policy ambition, market signals and investment criteria are not yet aligned
  • identify opportunities where better sequencing and coordination of funding could unlock progress
  • establish direct relationships that will support follow-up conversations beyond the room

The discussion also surfaced where gaps remain. In particular, the need for clearer market signals and more tailored support for tidal stream and other early-stage marine technologies was repeatedly raised. These are challenges that are difficult to address in isolation, but far more productive to tackle collectively.

The value of convening

For Marine Energy Wales, the roundtable reinforced the importance of our role as a neutral convener for the sector.

Members consistently tell us that access to finance is one of the most significant barriers to progress—not only in terms of capital availability, but in understanding how to engage effectively with funders. At the same time, finance organisations are keen to deepen their understanding of project development timelines, technology risk and the scale of Welsh supply-chain ambition.

Creating space for those conversations is where real value is added.

This is not about Marine Energy Wales brokering individual deals. It is about building shared understanding, reducing friction, and helping to align finance, policy and industry around credible pathways to delivery.

What comes next

This roundtable was not a one-off.

Marine Energy Wales is committed to continuing this work, developing structured and trusted forums where finance, industry and government can engage early, openly and constructively. As Wales moves from ambition to delivery in offshore wind and tidal energy, these relationships and conversations will be critical to ensuring projects are investable, deliverable and anchored in Welsh economic benefit.

We will continue to work with our members and partners to identify priority issues, convene the right voices, and help turn opportunity into tangible outcomes on the ground.

 

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Climate

Wales takes another giant leap towards becoming a zero-waste nation

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THE LATEST figures are in, and they’re impressive – Wales has pushed its recycling rate up to 68.4% in 2024-25, climbing from 66.6% the previous year. It’s a remarkable turnaround for a country that was recycling just 5% of its waste before devolution.

The boost comes as Wales’ new workplace recycling rules begin to show real results. Businesses, public sector organisations and third sector workplaces across the country are now required to separate key recyclable materials, and it’s making a measurable difference.

Local authorities collected an additional 8,187 tonnes of recyclable material from workplaces this year – that’s a 42% jump compared to last year. Meanwhile, residual waste from workplaces has dropped by 15.8%, meaning thousands of tonnes of valuable materials are being fed back into the economy rather than burned or buried.

The landfill figures tell their own story – just 0.7% of Wales’ waste ended up in landfill in 2024-25, compared to 95% before devolution.

Deputy First Minister Huw Irranca-Davies, who has responsibility for climate change, said: “We continue to build on Wales’ already world class recycling. This shows the huge shift in attitudes over the last few decades; recycling is now a part of who we are as a nation.”

He added: “I’m proud of every person in Wales who has played their part in getting us to where we are today – in our homes and now in our workplaces too. Thank you for joining this collective effort.”

Wales currently sits second in the world for recycling – leading the UK and trailing only Austria in global rankings published by Eunomia Research and Consulting and Reloop in 2024. More than half of Welsh councils hit the 70% recycling target, and over 90% improved their rates year-on-year.

The Deputy First Minister said: “Our recycling track record is something to be proud of as we continue taking action to tackle the climate and nature emergency and grow the green economy. But let’s not be complacent. Being number one in the world for recycling is within our grasp if we keep up the momentum.”

 

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Business

Pembroke Dock battery box energy scheme is approved

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FURTHER micro energy storage facility ‘battery box’ schemes in Pembrokeshire have been considered by county planners, with one backed and one withdrawn by the applicants.

In two separate applications to Pembrokeshire County Council, AMP Clean Energy sought permission for micro energy storage projects on land at Waterloo Industrial Estate, Eastern Avenue, Pembroke Dock, and land between Steynton Road and Sheffield Drive, Milford Haven.

A supporting statement accompanying each application says: “AMP Clean Energy is developing Battery Boxes across the UK to provide a low carbon, flexible and de-centralised store of electricity that benefits local communities, businesses, and homes.”

It says the battery boxes import electricity from the local electricity network when demand for electricity is low or when there are high levels of renewable energy available, exporting it back during periods of high demand to help address grid reliability issues prompted by an increase of intermittent (wind and solar) generation.

AMP Clean Energy says it is developing up to 1,250-plus Battery Boxes in the UK over the next three years and, to date, has received planning consent for more than 80 such schemes.

It says each box, which takes up roughly two car parking spaces, stores 800kWh of electricity, giving the potential to power 200 homes for four hours where there is a supply disruption.

The battery box schemes are part of a raft of applications in the county.

AMP was previously granted approval for schemes on land between King Street and Meyrick Street, Pembroke Dock and land in between Castle Quarry and Haven Court, Pembroke.

AMP Clean Energy was also recently granted permission for micro energy storage projects at on a verge at the Bridge Innovation Centre, Pembroke Dock, and land to the south of Withybush Road, Withybush Industrial Estate, Haverfordwest.

However, a scheme for a micro energy storage project on land at Fishguard Leisure Centre Car Park, near Ysgol Bro Gwaun was refused by the council’s planning committee late last year.

That scheme was refused, against an officer recommendation of approval, after concerns were raised including being in “an unsafe, unsustainable and unnecessary location,” and the “nightmare scenario” of a fire as children were leaving the school, with was disputed by AMP’s agent.

The latest Pembroke Dock application was conditionally approved but the Milford Haven scheme has been withdrawn.

 

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