Add a bookmark to get started

Solar Panels
27 January 20226 minute read

DLA Piper signs Power Purchase Agreement initiating the construction of UK solar farm

DLA Piper has signed a corporate power purchase agreement with NextEnergy Group relating to the energy generated from a new build solar farm in the UK, as part of DLA Piper’s drive to reach its decarbonatisation targets. It will be the first law firm anywhere in the world to undertake a Corporate Power Purchase Agreement (PPA).

The solar farm, to be built in Somerset, covers 46 acres and will produce 13 megawatts of additional renewable power that will be supplied directly to the UK’s national grid and thereby to the interconnected power network supplying DLA Piper’s 15 European and UK offices that are taking part in the project. The power generated by the solar farm will at least be the equivalent to, but likely in excess of, the power used by these offices.

Environmental credits generated by the project, that exceed the direct power requirements of DLA Piper, will be applied to its value chain to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions of its indirect emissions. This will include exploring innovative mechanisms to apply the surplus to support DLA Piper’s suppliers and business partners in their decarbonisation efforts, thereby further decarbonising DLA Piper’s supply chain.

“The firm’s investment into this solar farm is yet another illustration of our commitment to reducing our carbon footprint through innovative solutions.”

Natasha Luther-Jones

International Head of Sustainability and ESG

The PPA is a major milestone in DLA Piper’s journey to decarbonise and follows the firm’s announcement committing to halve its greenhouse gas emissions in absolute terms by 2030. As part of DLA Piper’s science-based target (SBT), this covers reductions across the firm’s entire value chain, including indirect greenhouse gas emissions from the supply chain against a 2019/20 baseline.

Natasha Luther-Jones, DLA Piper’s International Head of Sustainability and ESG and Global Co-Chair Energy and Natural Resources, said: “The firm’s investment into this solar farm is yet another illustration of our commitment to reducing our carbon footprint through innovative solutions. We are the first law firm to enter into a corporate PPA so this project is a true statement of our ambition to be one of the most impactful business law firms for sustainability. The firm has advised on over 1,000 renewable energy deals and projects over the past decade and it has been a real pleasure to apply the deep expertise that we have gained over this period to our own need to decarbonize.”

Simon Levine, Global Co-CEO at DLA Piper, said: “Sustainability and innovation are both fundamental to how we operate within DLA Piper and this project is a perfect illustration of both of these at work. It is hugely rewarding to see the firm apply the same solutions within our own organization that we have been advising our clients on for many years, especially in the corporate PPA space where Natasha Luther-Jones and her team lead the global market.”

Ross Grier, UK Managing Director of NextEnergy Capital, added: “The corporate PPA market continues to strengthen. Corporate PPAs will form an important component of the way companies seek to decarbonise over the next decade and it’s a pleasure being at the forefront of this with DLA Piper in the legal sector. NextEnergy is a leading developer and asset owner in the UK solar sector and it’s great to supplement our portfolio with this relationship with DLA Piper.”

Print