Firstly, Northern Ireland currently wastes over 20% of its renewable energy generation by turning off wind farms when we don’t have sufficient demand or grid capacity to use it. By deploying consistent energy loads, such as data centres, in the right locations and on Northern Ireland’s terms, we can utilise this wasted green energy, reducing curtailment compensation payments to generators which will ultimately reduce energy prices for all consumers.
Secondly, despite achieving 40% renewable electricity penetration by 2020, the north’s renewable deployment has stalled, with less than 90 MW of capacity deployed in the past five years. Over the same period, the Republic has deployed more than 15 times this volume. This has largely been due to a lack of demand growth on the grid, as well as a seven-year gap in any subsidy support schemes.
By requiring data centres to power their facilities with 100% new incremental renewable electricity (which most are already committed to doing), we can stimulate a new wave of renewable, grid, and infrastructure investment across Northern Ireland, including our first offshore wind developments, while letting private sector funding displace taxpayer support.
Thirdly, data centres will bring significant investment to Northern Ireland. Since 2014, Ireland has attracted over €15 billion of new infrastructure investment into the country, creating new local supply chains, employment and skills which have resulted in not only local activity but also spawned several international success stories which are now exporting their skills around the world. Given Northern Ireland’s engineering pedigree, we are well placed to replicate this.