John Greasley

HVDC Engineering Assurance And Interface Manager at Xlinks

John Greasley is an accomplished HVDC Engineering Assurance and Interface Manager at Xlinks since April 2024, bringing extensive experience from previous roles as an Independent Consultant at Interconnectables and a long tenure at National Grid from 1990 to 2023. At National Grid, John held several key positions, including North Sea Stakeholder Manager and Regulation and Stakeholder Manager for National Grid Interconnectors, contributing significantly to electricity network investment and delivery performance. John holds a BEng Hons degree in Mechanical Engineering from The University of Sheffield, earned between 1986 and 1989.

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Leicester, United Kingdom

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Xlinks

The Xlinks' Morocco - UK Power Project will provide reliable sustainable energy to the UK at a subsidy-free price. Locating solar generation in the Sahara produces high levels of energy throughout the year, which when combined with battery energy storage offers dispatchable clean energy. 4,000km of sub-sea HVDC cable will connect the power to the UK's Transmission Network where it will flow to consumers across the country. As the cost of Wind and Solar in the UK continues to decreases more energy will come from sustainable sources. This is vital to the UK achieving the ambitious carbon reduction targets that are enshrined in our law. However, Wind and Solar generation in the UK is intermittent, not just on a daily basis which can be balanced with storage, but also on a weekly and seasonal basis. This issue will become exacerbated over the next 15 years as more of the dirty fossil fuel power stations are decommissioned. Not only will the Xlinks' Morocco - UK Power Project provide affordable, clean energy it will also enable more Wind and Solar generation to be built in the UK, moving us close to a zero-carbon, low-cost energy network. Once complete, the Project’s wind and solar generation, combined with flexible battery storage, is expected to supply 3.6 gigawatts (GW) of affordable, reliable, and clean power and deliver approximately 8% of Britain’s current electricity needs – or the equivalent electricity of seven million homes.


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51-200

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