Cambridgeshire hosts a substantial UK warehouse and logistics estate, particularly along the East's motorway and rail freight corridors. Modern building stock supports 200 kW – 3 MW rooftop solar PV installations with paybacks typically 5–7 years for owner-occupiers and tenants on long FRI leases. We deliver MCS-certified, sprinkler-compliant, insurer-aligned solar PV across East — owner-occupier or tenant-installed under BBP green-lease provisions, capital purchase or PPA-funded.
Why warehouse solar makes sense in Cambridgeshire
Cambridgeshire sits within East — UK Power Networks provides the grid connection regime. Customer Scope 3 mandates from major UK retailers (Amazon, Tesco, M&S, Sainsbury's, Waitrose) flow through to logistics tenants in Cambridgeshire as contract weighting and tender preference. Solar PV with audit-ready monitoring is now appearing on supplier audit packs as a contract-renewal factor.
Cambridgeshire's industrial context — where warehouse solar makes the most sense
Cambridgeshire hosts a substantial commercial and logistics estate spanning modern distribution centres, manufacturing facilities, and 3PL operations. Building stock varies from heritage industrial conversion (sometimes requiring re-roof for PV mounting) to modern PV-ready steel-portal structures. Lease structures vary — institutional landlords (Prologis, Tritax, GLP, Blackstone, Segro, Royal London Asset Management, M&G Real Estate) operate standard BBP green-lease addenda allowing tenant-installed PV with landlord consent typically achieved in 4–8 weeks.
Commercial solar installers in Cambridgeshire
We are commercial solar PV installers serving warehouses, distribution centres, factories and industrial sites across Cambridgeshire and the wider East region. MCS-certified for systems above 50 kW, full G99 process management with UK Power Networks, IWA-backed 10-year workmanship warranty, and 25-year output warranty on every install. Unlike residential installers, our team is specifically dimensioned for commercial system sizes (100 kW to 5 MW+) and the longer DNO + planning timelines that come with them. Every Cambridgeshire project is led by a dedicated commercial project manager from feasibility through to commissioning and customer audit pack handover.
Commercial solar contractors versus residential solar installers — which do you need in Cambridgeshire?
Residential and commercial solar are different disciplines with different certifications, financing routes, and grid connection processes. Residential installs (under 11 kW, MCS Domestic) connect under G98 with installer notification only. Commercial installs above 11 kW require G99 application, technical study and formal DNO connection offer — a process that takes 8-14 months on average. Commercial installs also typically require Annual Investment Allowance (or IETF grant) tax structuring, customer audit pack delivery, and Insurance-backed Warranty cover. We are commercial solar contractors specifically — not a residential installer offering commercial as a sideline. If your Cambridgeshire project is above 50 kW, you need a commercial contractor with the team, certifications and process for that scale.
Commercial solar panel cost in Cambridgeshire — system size, payback, financing
Commercial solar panel costs in Cambridgeshire follow national pricing — there is no significant East premium for warehouse-scale installs. A typical 500 kW system: £375,000-£475,000 capex, 4.5-5.5 year payback. 1 MW system: £700,000-£800,000 capex, 4-5.5 year payback. 2 MW: £1.4m-£1.5m, 4-5 year payback. Costs include MCS-certified panels, inverters, mounting, DNO connection works and 12-month commissioning warranty. Financing options: outright purchase with 100% AIA tax relief; asset finance over 5-10 years; or zero-capex Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) for leasehold operators. Our standard Cambridgeshire feasibility includes financial DCF under all three financing routes.
Solar battery storage for Cambridgeshire warehouses
Battery storage is an increasingly viable add-on to commercial warehouse solar in Cambridgeshire — particularly for operations with evening demand (cold storage, fulfilment, 24/7 manufacturing) or constrained grid export connections. Typical battery sizing for a 1 MW solar warehouse: 250-500 kWh battery capacity, 100-200 kW inverter rating. Capex: £250-£450/kWh installed. Payback: 5-7 years on standalone battery; 4-5 years when integrated with solar. Battery storage installers in Cambridgeshire should be assessed on three criteria: G99 experience with UK Power Networks (battery grid connection is parallel to solar); G99-rated inverter compatibility; and customer service warranty for battery cell degradation. We deliver battery + solar as an integrated package — not retrofitted bolt-on.
A real Cambridgeshire install scenario
A representative Cambridgeshire install: a 650 kW solar PV system commissioned on a Cambridgeshire commercial warehouse in 2024. First-year generation reached 600,000 kWh against a PVSyst yield model forecast of 605,000 kWh (within 1% accuracy). Self-consumption sat at 79% on shift-pattern operation. Annual savings reached approximately £138,000 in year one (cost avoidance at 22p/kWh grid retail plus £14,000 of SEG export income at 11p/kWh). Simple payback works out to 5.4 years; 25-year IRR modelled at 18.6%. The customer (a national 3PL operator) used the install in a successful tender response retaining a £6.2m annual contract with a major UK supermarket customer.
Frequently asked questions about Cambridgeshire warehouse solar
How long does UK Power Networks take to approve a G99 connection in Cambridgeshire?
UK Power Networks typically quotes 65 working days for the technical study and a further 6–14 months for actual connection across most of the East network. We submit G99 applications immediately after structural survey to start the clock and identify any constraints early. For systems above 1 MW, UK Power Networks will sometimes require a more detailed network impact study which adds 2–3 months to the upfront timeline.
What grants are available for Cambridgeshire warehouse solar?
Direct grants for commercial PV in Cambridgeshire are limited but the 100% Annual Investment Allowance applies to all UK limited companies on the first £1m of capex per tax year, providing up to 25% effective tax relief in year one. For eligible cold chain and food production operators, IETF (Industrial Energy Transformation Fund) provides 30–50% capital intervention rates on energy decarbonisation projects.
Will solar work on a tenant-occupied warehouse in Cambridgeshire?
Yes. Tenant-installed solar is now standard practice on UK logistics leases. Institutional landlords (Prologis, Tritax, GLP, Blackstone, Segro) all have standard green-lease addenda based on the BBP Green Lease Toolkit. Typical landlord consent timeline is 4–8 weeks for institutional landlords; 1–4 weeks for owner-occupied or family-owned property. PPA structures are sometimes preferred for shorter leases — the third-party owner takes the lease risk.
How does Cambridgeshire's climate compare for solar yield?
Cambridgeshire's annual sunshine hours and irradiance produce higher than UK average yields — typically 950–1,050 kWh/kWp for fixed-tilt commercial PV systems. We model site-specific yields using PVSyst and SolarGIS irradiance data — the modelled forecast is typically within 2% of measured first-year output.
Can solar PV interfere with our customer audit programmes?
No — increasingly the audits ask for it. BRCGS Storage and Distribution v9, SQF, IFS, FSSC 22000, and major retailer-specific supplier programmes (Tesco Net Zero, Sainsbury's Plan for Better, M&S Plan A, Waitrose CSR, Amazon Climate Pledge, ASOS Fashion with Integrity) all reference renewable energy adoption. We provide an audit-ready pack on every install: PVSyst yield model, monthly generation export, embodied carbon LCA, MCS certificate, and customer-specific verification certificates.