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New solar farm will power major technology campus

New solar farm will power major technology campus

Yahoo26-07-2025
A new solar farm will soon power a major technology campus.
Xela Energy has received full planning permission to build a 5MW solar installation that will supply renewable electricity directly to IBM's Hursley site.
This project is the first in the UK to connect a data centre to a dedicated solar farm via a private-wire system.
Alexander Goodall, founder and CEO of Xela Energy, said: "This project represents a major milestone in how large power users can decarbonise with certainty, speed and integrity.
"It's a blueprint for how the UK can decarbonise its most energy-intensive industries at scale.
"If our energy is unsustainable, so is our existence.
"That's why Xela Energy exists – to make clean, cost-effective power available directly at the point of use; without waiting for policy, grid reform or subsidies.
"Projects like this show we don't have to choose between economic growth and environmental responsibility – it's possible to have both."
READ MORE: Southampton MPs hit out at Southern Water CEO over 'massive payout'
Located on nearby agricultural land, the solar farm will supply traceable, renewable energy to the Hursley campus without relying on the national grid or government subsidies.
Xela Energy said the project will reduce IBM's demand on the UK electricity grid, helping to improve energy security and free up capacity for other users.
The Hursley solar farm is expected to produce nearly five million kWh of electricity each year.
Over its lifetime, the project will save around 46,000 tonnes of CO2 – the equivalent of planting 60,000 trees.
The solar farm will also lower the carbon footprint of IBM's 27,000 square-foot data centre, which has been in operation since 1977.
The project will include landscaping and areas dedicated to biodiversity improvements.
Xela Energy said the solar farm supports its broader goal of helping major energy users decarbonise amid rising demand from generative artificial intelligence and high-performance computing.
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‘One in four councils could lose money' under Government's funding proposals
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‘One in four councils could lose money' under Government's funding proposals

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Universities ‘keen' to offer places to students even if they miss grades
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Universities ‘keen' to offer places to students even if they miss grades

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Woman wins $200,000 case after her phone started a house fire while charging
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TL;DR A woman has been awarded the equivalent of $200,000 after her phone caused a house fire while charging. The court ruled the LG K8 was defective and failed to meet safety expectations. Most of the payout will go to her insurer, but she also received compensation for injuries. We've heard multiple reports of the Google Pixel 6a melting down over recent months, but nothing as nightmarish as this. For one woman, her plugged-in Android phone caused a house fire, eventually leading to a six-figure payout from the manufacturer. As reported by the BBC, a judge at Edinburgh Sheriff Court has ruled that an LG K8 smartphone caused a fire while charging, awarding £150,000 ($200,000) in damages. The majority of that will go to the woman's insurer, but she was also compensated for smoke inhalation and the mental health impact. The fire began in the living room on October 31, 2018, while the LG phone was charging with the correct equipment. A second phone and a laptop were also plugged in nearby, but the judge concluded that the LG was the source. He found it failed to meet basic safety expectations and was defective. Denise Parks and her husband were asleep upstairs when the fire started. She was later treated for smoke inhalation and experienced heightened anxiety and panic attacks, leaving her unable to work for several months. The phone had been issued by her employer, and the lawsuit was filed against LG Electronics UK Ltd. While the incident happened back in 2018, the ruling and payout have only just been finalized. LG shut down its phone division in 2021. Follow

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