| Network Rail has taken another major step towards powering all its offices, depots and managed stations with renewable electricity after signing a deal with leading renewable energy company RWE to supply around 65% of its non-traction electricity from one of its offshore wind farms. |
| The Corporate Power Purchase Agreement (CoPPA), Network Rail’s second within a year, will deliver 300 GWh of renewable electricity annually over five years.
Under the deal, power will be supplied from RWE’s Gwynt y Môr Offshore Wind Farm, located 15 miles off the coast of North Wales in the Irish Sea, which will help Network Rail reduce its carbon emissions by around 168,000 tonnes of CO₂e – the equivalent of planting 6.5 million trees. The agreement represents a significant step towards Network Rail’s ambition to have all non-traction electricity used across its offices, depots and all of its 20 managed stations sourced from sustainable energy by 2030. Paul Marshall, Network Rail’s chief financial officer said:
Olaf Lubenow, Head of Commodity Solutions UK, North & South Europe at RWE Supply & Trading , said:
The agreement forms a key part of Network Rail’s Greener Strategy, which sets out its plans to achieve a sustainable railway, and follows a CoPPA signed with EDF Renewables in 2025, which secured 64 GWh of clean energy per year from a new solar farm currently under construction. Together, the two agreements will provide around 80% of the organisation’s non-traction electricity from renewable sources, putting Network Rail firmly on track to meet its 2030 target. Electricity from RWE’s Gwynt y Môr Offshore Wind Farm, commissioned in 2015 and consisting of 160 wind turbines with a total capacity of 576 megawatts, will begin powering Network Rail’s offices, stations and depots from 1 April 2027. |
