INVESTOR STORIES| Clive

In which retired Witney resident speaks of the 'investment in community' and the importance of making a difference.

 

The fact that this is a local project, run by a determined group of volunteers, which will provide renewable energy for local communities, is something which I really wanted to support.  

It's an investment in the community - and it was very easy to set up as well.  I didn't have to complete lots of forms and the brochure answered all my questions in an easy and accessible way.  

This is about making a difference

This is about making a difference; reducing carbon emissions in a community-led, sensitive way.  

I'm in. hope as many people as possible will support Southill Community Energy.

Clive lives in Witney and is retired from the RAF as a pattern maker

INVESTOR STORIES| Robin

In which a Financial Advisor and father of two extolls the financial virtues of SCE

I'm in, because, as a father of 2 daughters I’m very concerned that my children, and their children, have a decent planet on which to live.

We all have an obligation to think about the future and not just ourselves, and the ‘here and now’.

I have invested as a way of contributing towards a better future. However, as a financial adviser by profession, I have assessed the risks, and the return of 5%, (10 times the Bank of England base rate!) is not to be sniffed at.

We all have an obligation to think about the future.

You can’t get that from a deposit account or National Savings. Do you have £250 idling away in a current account earning 0.1%pa or less? Or, if you have money in Premium Bonds, when did you last win? Maybe you have received a gift on behalf of your children and aren’t sure where to invest it.

I’m sure pretty much everyone could invest something.

Do it now, and like yourself a bit more.

Robin is a Financial Advisor based in Charlbury. 

 

 

INVESTOR STORIES| Isabel

In which an investor from Steeple Aston talks of making hard-earned cash work for good

Having the opportunity to support something that you can 'see' and 'feel' is a great way to invest money.

Investing in Southill Solar means that my neighbouring local community benefits directly.

Make your money work for good

Along with the 'green' credentials and healthy financial returns - higher than you'll get in a bank or ISA account at the moment - its difficult to see why you wouldn't put some of your hard earned cash into this project and make your money work for good. I'm in.

Isabel is a business consultant based in Steeple Aston. 

Come and meet the SCE directors!

The SCE team are meeting people, answering questions and spreading the word all over Oxfordshire - please do come along and say hello!


Upcoming events

The directors of Southill Community Energy will be answering questions and discussing our plans at Finstock, Fawler, Chipping Norton and beyond.

Keep an eye on our events pages to find out when we're in your part of the world.

Have a question?

Please do get in touch at any time - we're only too happy to answer any questions you may have. Contact us here.

Rather get independent advice?

If you want to know more about our share offer, and are looking for some impartial advice, you can speak to Ethex. Ethex is the not-for-profit company that is managing the SCE share offer.

Their team can offer impartial advice. Call Ethex on 01865 403 304 or email help@ethex.org.uk.

Southill Solar in a nutshell

So - we put up a solar farm. For 25 years, it generates enough green electricity to power 1,100 homes. While it's up, we manage the land almost like a nature reserve - wildflowers, habitat for rare British plants and animals. It also generates about about £30,000 a year for local community projects. Then, when 25 years are up, we dismantle it, recycle what we can and return the land to its former state.

What's not to love?

Invest now - look for the SCE share offer on the Ethex website - and we can make this happen.

Have a look at the numbers


The great British move to local, renewable energy

Als Vowles, technical lead on Southill Solar, explains how energy generation in the UK is changing - and why she's taken a year off work to get Southill Solar up and running.

Occasionally when I have time to breathe, I ask myself whether I am crazy.

I have just taken a year off work, with the pressures that this brings, plus three small children to juggle.

Instead of earning a living, and with a team of other passionate locals, I am trying to get the Southill Solar farm built so that we have our own community power station. This, I believe, will really make a difference…

The youngest Southill Solar supporter (and newest member of Als's family!)

The youngest Southill Solar supporter (and newest member of Als's family!)


This will really make a difference

Back in 2001, I came away from a degree in Geology with two pieces of information that made me hell-bent on joining the UK’s renewables revolution. The first was that man-made climate change was real and a huge threat to our planet, seen in ice core measurements from Antarctica. The second was that the disposal of nuclear waste will leave an ugly legacy for future generations and that there is no safe place to store it.

Living in the UK, with such vast and varied renewable energy resources – wind, wave, tidal, solar and wood – I wanted to be part of this huge shift towards local and sustainable green power.

The massive uptake in UK renewables

A few years later, as an employee of one of the big 6 energy suppliers in the UK, a German colleague presented the vision of shifting our energy generation away from a few large scale centralised power stations, to local decentralised community energy generators as was happening across northern Europe.

His presentation was inspirational, but was hit by a wave of negativity from people in the room who believed that our system in the UK was too ingrained to attempt this change.

Forwarding 10 years to 2015, what a different story this is.

In 2005, just 4% of our electricity was from renewable sources and now in 2016, we are looking at more than 20%. This massive uptake in UK renewables has had significant implications in the way that our electricity networks are managed. New tools and technologies are arriving thick and fast to address these changes and make a much smarter power grid.

Renewable energy is going to win – communities will be self-sufficient in green power

We are now at an energy crossroads in the UK. On the one hand, power is being pumped out from large fossil fuel and nuclear power stations and on the flipside, power is coming from smaller green generators dotted all around the UK. If we could pin down for certain which way the UK was going to leap, it would help us vastly in the implementation of new systems to manage our energy supply effectively.

It all seems obvious to me though, that despite current Government policies, local power is gaining ground. With the new generation of battery storage led by serious players in the market, renewable generation is going to win and communities will eventually become self-sufficient in green power.

Southill Solar – our own green power

This is why I am working so hard to create Southill Solar, a community owned solar farm next to my home town of Charlbury, in Oxfordshire, led by Southill Community Energy. We have the opportunity to have our own green electricity resource which will power 1,100 households in our rural area and which we should be able to link directly to local people’s own power use in the not too distant future.

Join us – be an investor-member

We are looking for investors to take a share of this scheme and own it. Returns are good and the investment is good with all of the income being recycled back into the local area to be spent on more community environmental projects. 

This is surely a magnificent flagship project for local green energy generation, made all the more exciting in that it is in David Cameron’s own constituency – and following on from all of his Government’s cuts, it will be one of the last solar farms in the UK for now.​