Cumbria's biggest hydro-electric scheme nears completion

Cumbria's biggest hydro-electric scheme nears completion

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WATCH: 'We want to been the greenest we can be'

Cumbria's biggest hydro-electric scheme is nearing completion.

The construction work stretches for almost a mile and a half across a fell near Ambleside.

When complete it will provide the equivalent of half the power needed by the village.

And the project has been a rather unusual backer.

Cumbria's biggest hydro-electric scheme nears completion

Hydro-electric power Credit: ITV Border

Cumbria's biggest hydro-electric scheme is nearing completion. The construction work stretches for almost a mile and a half across a mountainside just outside Ambleside.

When complete it will provide the equivalent of half the power needed by the village, around 1400 homes.

Hydro-electric power Credit: ITV Border

The force of the water flowing down Scandale Beck is being harnessed and will be turned into hydro-electric power when the £2.8 million project is opened next month. The company building the scheme, Ellergreen Hydro, has a rather unusual partner. A third of the money has come from the Carlisle Diocese of the Church of England.

Martin Jayne, the Chairman of the Carlisle Diocesan Finance Board, says:

We're putting this money into green energy because we do have a policy whereby we want to be the greenest diocese we can be and we're carbon neutral I think is the phrase, the first diocese to be there."

– Martin Jayne
Hydro-electric power Credit: ITV Border

Ellergreen Hydro is involved with more than 15 similar schemes around the Lake District. It says hydro electric power is becoming more and more popular in Cumbria and this scheme will also allow people to choose directly to make use of it.

Mark Cropper, the Managing Director, says:

It's going to be the very first where we're going to be able to actually offer people the ability to buy electricity directly from this scheme and that is pioneering and it's something we're working on right now."

– Mark Cropper

At the moment the construction work has left a very obvious scar on the landscape, but the company says in 18 months it will be impossible to see that any work has taken place here.

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