Friday 22 January 2010

Client News-ENGINEERING DESIGN PROGRAMME START FOR GATEWAY GAS STORAGE FACILITY

Press Release

Thursday, January 21st 2010

For media enquiries, please contact Paul Taylor (Taylor Keogh Communications): +44 (0)20 3170 8465 / +44 (0)7966 782611

ENGINEERING DESIGN PROGRAMME START FOR GATEWAY GAS STORAGE FACILITY

2014 targeted for commercial operation

Detailed engineering work on the Gateway gas storage facility, to be built offshore in the East Irish Sea, has started. AMEC, Parsons Brinckerhoff and Senergy have been appointed by Gateway Storage Company to undertake the front-end engineering design (FEED) work for both the offshore and onshore elements of the 1.5bn cubic metre underground storage scheme.

The work over the next 12 months will support a commitment to construction of the facility at the end of 2010 and enable the commencement of gas storage services for the UK market in 2014.

The £600m storage facility will add new capacity equal to approximately 30% of current UK storage capacity, sufficient to meet five days of Britain’s average gas demand.

Gateway will be built in salt caverns approximately 750m beneath the surface of the seabed and located 15 miles offshore, south west of Barrow-in-Furness. The Gateway facility will be connected to the National Gas Transmission System (NTS) via a new pipeline to a gas compression station adjacent to the existing Morecambe gas terminals at Barrow.

AMEC’s work will include offshore installations, pipelines, the onshore compression station at the Morecambe terminals and the connections into the National Grid. Parsons Brinckerhoff will advise Gateway on the salt cavern design and construction, and Senergy’s work will concentrate on the offshore infrastructure, installation, logistics and well designs. The project team has been mobilised and is based in Aberdeen.

Andrew Stacey, Director of Gateway Storage, said: “The detailed engineering design work, and the tender process for the main construction contracts that will follow later this year, will support a commitment to construction at the end of this year and the start of storage services during 2014. We are delighted to have the depth of experience that AMEC, Parsons Brinckerhoff and Senergy offer us and look forward to working with them in order to deliver the much needed Gateway facility.”

“Given the scale of the project, there is much work to do but Gateway Storage will bring storage capacity and deliverability to the UK energy market, and so help reduce price volatility and risk.”

Notes to Editors:

1. Gateway Storage (www.gatewaystorage.co.uk) secured consent from the UK Government in November 2008 and from Barrow Council in June 2008, and a site licence agreement from the Crown Estate in 2007.

2. Gateway Storage is a company that was formed to develop the gas storage project and is managed by Stag Energy. Stag Energy (www.stagenergy.com) is an independent company, headquartered in Edinburgh. The company, established in 2002, has extensive experience of managing the development, construction and operations of gas storage and power generation projects in the UK and overseas.

3. Storing gas in salt caverns enables firms to retrieve gas rapidly to cope with spikes in peak demand. The British Geological Survey, in a report commissioned by BERR, highlighted a number of offshore areas suitable for salt caverns, including the Irish Sea and the Southern North Sea. In its report, the BGS specifically noted that Gateway’s site was located in one of the very best areas in the UK.

4. Senergy (www.senergyworld.com) is a circa £80million ($120million) revenue energy services company with headquarters in Aberdeen, UK, and a network of global offices in the UK, Norway, Middle East, South-East Asia and Australia. Established in 2005, Senergy provides integrated energy services encompassing geosciences, reservoir engineering, geohazard assessment, marine site surveys, rig positioning, wells engineering and operations, project management and alternative energy solutions.

5. AMEC (LSE: AMEC) is a focused supplier of high-value consultancy, engineering and project management services to the world’s natural resources, nuclear, clean energy, water and environmental sectors. With annual revenues of over £2.6 billion, AMEC designs, delivers and maintains strategic and complex assets for its customers. AMEC's Natural Resources, Power & Process and Earth & Environmental businesses employ almost 22,000 people in around 40 countries worldwide (www.amec.com).

6. Parsons Brinckerhoff (www.pbworld.com) develops and operates infrastructure around the world, with 13,000 employees in the Americas, Europe, Africa, Middle East, Asia and Australia-Pacific regions. PB offers skills and resources in strategic consulting, planning, engineering, program/construction management and operations for all modes of infrastructure including transportation, power, community development, water and the environment.

For further information:

Gateway Storage Company Ltd

Andrew Stacey / George Grant

T: +44 (0)131 550 3380

E : astacey@stagenergy.com

ggrant@stagenergy.com

or

Paul Taylor (Taylor Keogh Communications)

T: +44 (0) 20 3170 8465

E: paul@taylorkeogh.com

Wednesday 6 January 2010

New investment paves way for UK’s first commercial-scale tidal farm

New investment paves way for UK’s first commercial-scale tidal farm

British tidal energy company Marine Current Turbines (MCT) has raised £3.5m from an investor group led by Carbon Trust Investments Limited and including Bank Invest, EDF Energy, High Tide and a group of significant private investors. The funding will help MCT in its plans to deploy the UK’s first commercial tidal energy farm in UK waters within the next two years.

MCT is the developer of SeaGen, the world’s first and largest grid-connected system that extracts energy from tidal currents. Part of the new funding will support MCT’s first deployment of SeaGen in Northern Ireland’s Strangford Lough which has now been successfully operating for more than six months. The company is now also looking to export its technology abroad.

Tom Delay, Chief Executive, of the Carbon Trust said: “The UK is leading the way in marine energy and stands to reap the rewards through new jobs and revenue. Marine Current Turbines has developed one of the leading tidal energy devices and its proven technology is now ready to be deployed in a commercial-scale tidal farm which will be a UK first. The current economic climate has created difficulties for companies like MCT operating within a capital intensive sector. We’re delighted to be able to lead this important group of investors in providing funding to a key player in the UK’s growing marine energy sector.”

Martin Wright, Managing Director of MCT, said: “We are delighted to secure the support of the Carbon Trust. Their investment, supported by a number of our existing shareholders, underlines the achievements made by MCT in designing, deploying and running a commercial scale tidal system and their confidence in the company’s abilities to develop a tidal farm within the next two years.

We have established clear water ahead of our rivals and we see this significant investment, allied by the Government’s actions to encourage tidal and wave energy, giving the company a massive boost to realise the commercial opportunities that exist in the UK as well as overseas markets.”

Energy and Climate Change Minister, Lord Hunt said: “It is critical that we support companies like MCT, so that we can harness the enormous potential from wave and tidal power on our shores. We have the natural resources, the technical skills, and the talent to lead the world in this kind of advanced green manufacturing, which I believe will be the economic success story of the 21st century.”

MCT installed the world’s first commercial scale tidal stream turbine, the 1.2 MW SeaGen, in Strangford Lough in Northern Ireland in 2008. The device is now operating remotely and generating power that is being sold to ESB Independent Energy under a Power Purchase Agreement helping to supply businesses across Northern Ireland with renewable electricity.

The Carbon Trust’s investment is drawn from a new £18m fund, provided by the Department of Energy and Climate Change, announced by the Carbon Trust last month. The new fund is designed to speed up Britain’s move towards a low carbon economy by providing promising UK clean energy sector companies with investment over the next 12-18 months.

ENDS

Notes to editors

For more information or an interview please contact the Carbon Trust press office on 0207 544 3100

or Marine Current Turbines:

Martin Wright, Managing Director

Tel: 0117 979 1888 / 07785 340671

Paul Taylor (Taylor Keogh Communications)

Tel: 020 3170 8465 / 07966 782611

Recent Carbon Trust investments:

· The Carbon Trust invested £4m in New Earth enabling it to complete the second closing in its ongoing £15m equity fundraising announced in August 2009. It has raised £9m to date. Building on its existing landfill diversion operation the company is now looking to use gasification and pyrolysis technologies to convert waste-derived fuel into electricity.

· Furthering its investment in the company, the Carbon Trust co-led a £2.7m funding round in Whitfield Solar with a private syndicate of new investors and supported by existing investors the Cascade Fund and Kilsby Ltd. The developer of solar energy technology is now looking to extend its sales strategy in both existing and emerging solar markets including Portugal, Greece, Italy and Australia for near term sales, with plans to have commercially available product in China and India by the end of 2010.

· The Carbon Trust invested in RLtec alongside co-investors Low Carbon Accelerator and Naxos Capital Partners. The investment will support further development of its smart grid-management technology, which can increase the energy efficiency of the whole electricity supply chain and can play a key role in balancing and stabilising grids globally, reducing reliance on stand-by coal fired power stations and assisting with the integration of renewable energy sources onto the grid.

· Plaxica raised over £1m in equity funding from Imperial Innovations, the Carbon Trust and the National Endowment for Science, Technology and the Arts (NESTA). The investment will allow Plaxica to continue developing processes for producing a new generation of polylactic acid biopolymers. These are expected to have improved physical properties compared with first generation biopolymers, a smaller environmental footprint, be fully recyclable, and cost competitive with current oil-based alternatives.

The Carbon Trust:

· The Carbon Trust is an independent company set up in 2001 by Government in response to the threat of climate change, to accelerate the move to a low carbon economy by working with organisations to reduce carbon emissions and develop commercial low carbon technologies.

· We cut carbon emissions now by giving business and the public sector expert advice, finance and certification to help them reduce their carbon footprint and to stimulate demand for low carbon products and services. Through our work, we’ve already helped save over 23 million tonnes of carbon, delivering costs savings of around £1.4 billion. We aim to help our customers cut a further 17MtCO2 and save another £1 billion in the next three years.

· We cut future carbon emissions by developing new low carbon technologies. We are helping the UK become a global hub for low carbon innovation. We do this through funding and managing projects, investing and collaborating on low carbon technologies and by identifying market barriers and practical ways to overcome them. Our work on commercialising new technologies will deliver savings of up to 23 million tonnes of carbon a year by 2050.

About CT Investment Partners LLP

· CT Investment Partners LLP is the FSA authorised and regulated venture capital advisory firm, jointly owned by Carbon Trust and its executives, which advises Carbon Trust Investments.

About Carbon Trust Investments

· Carbon Trust Investments Limited is the venture capital investment subsidiary of the Carbon Trust. Carbon Trust Investments has invested in 18 businesses over the last seven years. Two of these companies, Ceres Power PLC and CMR Fuel Cells PLC listed on AIM. A further portfolio company, Heliswirl Technology Ltd, has achieved a partial exit.

· Other portfolio companies include 4energy Ltd, CamSemi Ltd, Acal Energy Ltd, Pelamis Wave Power Ltd, Heliswirl Technologies Ltd, Natural Buildings Technology Ltd, Whitfield Solar Ltd, Green Biologics Ltd, RLtec and Plaxica

About Marine Current Turbines

Marine Current Turbines Ltd (www.marineturbines.com) was established in 2000. The 1.2MW SeaGen was deployed in Northern Ireland’s Strangford Lough in April 2008; it has the capacity to generate power for the equivalent of about 1500 homes. It works in principle much like an “underwater windmill” with the rotors driven by the power of the tidal currents rather than the wind.

A single SeaGen system is planned to be deployed in Canada’s Bay of Fundy during 2011 by Canadian company, Minas Bay Pulp & Paper. Since February 2008, the company has partnered RWE npower on plans to develop a tidal farm in waters off Anglesey, north Wales.