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Heat and Power co-location: unlocking sustainable data centre development

Picture of Ros Harris
data centres

The UK data centre market is booming.

The government forecasts that we will need at least 6 GW of AI-capable data centre capacity by 2030 – a three-fold increase driven by intense AI demand and hyperscale investments – and data centres can now be classed as Nationally Significant Infrastructure Projects. Yet developers and investors face significant hurdles in the realms of power connections and a growing focus on environmental impact, including energy and water consumption.  Lead times for demand connections are lengthening and, with demand connection on the horizon, developers are looking to co-location (the strategic siting of data centres alongside complementary energy assets such as renewable generation, battery storage, and gas) as a potential part of addressing demand. Simultaneously, surplus heat offtake may play a role in cooling solutions and enhance sustainability credentials.

The Challenge

The scale of the challenge is striking. A single hyperscale data centre campus can consume hundreds of megawatts of electricity. As reported in the JLL 2026 Global Data Center Outlook, the average grid connection lead time for a new 50 MW data centre in the UK is seven years.
 
Against this backdrop, the UK’s binding net zero commitments and the planning system’s increasing emphasis on sustainability also mean that developers must demonstrate their projects are part of the energy solution, not merely a new source of demand. The potential for on-site generation, co-located renewables projects and the ability to manage cooling sustainably and repurpose surplus heat is rapidly growing in strategic importance.

The Opportunity

Heat offtake is perhaps the most immediately compelling form of co-location from a sustainability and cooling perspective. Data centres generate enormous quantities of low-grade heat through their cooling systems, which has historically been expelled into the atmosphere as waste. Where facilities are designed with heat recovery infrastructure, that rejected heat can be captured and redistributed into district heating networks serving nearby homes, offices, and public buildings – such as the Old Oak and Park Royal Energy Network (OPEN). A well-designed heat offtake arrangement turns a cooling challenge into a community asset, reduces surrounding carbon intensity, and materially strengthens a project’s planning narrative. Several London borough frameworks already actively encourage this approach.
 
The regulatory picture is sharpening. Heat network zoning under the Energy Act 2023 will empower local authorities to designate zones where buildings must connect to district heat networks. Sites within or adjacent to a heat zone may face requirements to make waste heat available – but equally, a data centre positioned as an anchor heat source becomes a highly attractive proposition for network developers and local authorities alike. For developers willing to engage early with heat network planning, this represents a significant first-mover advantage.
 
Renewable or alternative energy co-location addresses a different concern. By siting data centres alongside solar farms, onshore wind, or other renewable generation, developers can secure dedicated clean power and benefit from private wire or sleeved power purchase arrangements. From a planning perspective, on-site or adjacent renewable supply bolsters a scheme’s sustainability credentials. Developers are also considering battery storage and small modular reactors (SMRs) to complete the picture. These assets can smooth intermittent renewable supply, offer back-up capacity satisfying lender and tenant uptime requirements, and complement heat offtake by ensuring operational resilience without sole dependence on grid supply.

The Challenge

The scale of the challenge is striking. A single hyperscale data centre campus can consume hundreds of megawatts of electricity. As reported in the JLL 2026 Global Data Center Outlook, the average grid connection lead time for a new 50 MW data centre in the UK is seven years.
 
Against this backdrop, the UK’s binding net zero commitments and the planning system’s increasing emphasis on sustainability also mean that developers must demonstrate their projects are part of the energy solution, not merely a new source of demand. The potential for on-site generation, co-located renewables projects and the ability to manage cooling sustainably and repurpose surplus heat is rapidly growing in strategic importance.

The Opportunity

Heat offtake is perhaps the most immediately compelling form of co-location from a sustainability and cooling perspective. Data centres generate enormous quantities of low-grade heat through their cooling systems, which has historically been expelled into the atmosphere as waste. Where facilities are designed with heat recovery infrastructure, that rejected heat can be captured and redistributed into district heating networks serving nearby homes, offices, and public buildings – such as the Old Oak and Park Royal Energy Network (OPEN). A well-designed heat offtake arrangement turns a cooling challenge into a community asset, reduces surrounding carbon intensity, and materially strengthens a project’s planning narrative. Several London borough frameworks already actively encourage this approach.
 
The regulatory picture is sharpening. Heat network zoning under the Energy Act 2023 will empower local authorities to designate zones where buildings must connect to district heat networks. Sites within or adjacent to a heat zone may face requirements to make waste heat available – but equally, a data centre positioned as an anchor heat source becomes a highly attractive proposition for network developers and local authorities alike. For developers willing to engage early with heat network planning, this represents a significant first-mover advantage.
 
Renewable or alternative energy co-location addresses a different concern. By siting data centres alongside solar farms, onshore wind, or other renewable generation, developers can secure dedicated clean power and benefit from private wire or sleeved power purchase arrangements. From a planning perspective, on-site or adjacent renewable supply bolsters a scheme’s sustainability credentials. Developers are also considering battery storage and small modular reactors (SMRs) to complete the picture. These assets can smooth intermittent renewable supply, offer back-up capacity satisfying lender and tenant uptime requirements, and complement heat offtake by ensuring operational resilience without sole dependence on grid supply.

What does this mean?

Co-location is not without complexity. It requires careful structuring — both technically and contractually. There is a timing challenge too: multiple complementary developments must come together at the right moment. Multi-party co-located schemes demand robust interface agreements and governance structures to align differing risk appetites.

These challenges require early and integrated thinking. Site selection must now be driven as much by energy strategy as by connectivity and land value. Contractual frameworks need to allocate risk appropriately across multiple parties and ensure bankability for project finance. A compelling co-location narrative is materially beneficial for planning applications – and in an increasingly competitive market, the ability to deliver a credible co-location proposition is becoming a genuine differentiator.

Co-location presents a compelling opportunity for developers and investors – but it requires early, joined-up thinking and a robust contractual framework to deliver successfully.

Contact us

To discuss data centre development, land rights, co-location and heat offtake, please get in touch with Ros Harris, Emma Andrews, Matthew Tucker, or Alec Whiter.

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