ALPS Electrical — solar partners in Teesside, Cleveland & County Durham
Working with ALPS Electrical (Yarm, North Yorkshire) on farm-building solar projects across Teesside, Cleveland & County Durham. Project process, local exp
For UK farm operators commissioning solar PV across the Teesside, Cleveland & County Durham area, the question of which installer or trade partner to engage is one of the most material project decisions. ALPS Electrical (Yarm, North Yorkshire-based) is one of the regional partners we work with routinely on coordinated farm-building installations across the area. This post sets out the wider context for selecting a solar partner in Teesside, Cleveland & County Durham, the questions worth asking, and where ALPS Electrical’s specialism sits within the regional installer landscape.
Why regional expertise matters for Teesside, Cleveland & County Durham farm solar
UK farm-building solar isn’t a generic commercial installation. The regional context shapes every project in ways that generalist installers from outside the area often miss. For Teesside, Cleveland & County Durham specifically, the considerations include: the regional Distribution Network Operator’s specific capacity profile and connection timelines; the institutional landlord landscape (Crown Estate, Church Commissioners, National Trust, county council farms, family estates — each with their own tenant-PV addendum framework); the predominant farm-building stock and its age (pre-2000 asbestos cement vs modern profiled steel cladding); the local planning authority’s approach to Permitted Development on agricultural buildings; the seasonal calendar of working farms across the area; and the relationships needed with regional asbestos contractors, scaffolding firms, and electrical sub-contractors.
A regional partner brings deep familiarity with all of these. ALPS Electrical operates from Yarm, North Yorkshire with substantial local network across the Teesside, Cleveland & County Durham agricultural sector. Commercial electrical and solar contractor with substantial farm-building portfolio across Teesside and the wider North East.
What ALPS Electrical brings to Teesside, Cleveland & County Durham farm projects
When we deliver a farm solar project across Teesside, Cleveland & County Durham, the regional partnership typically operates in one of three configurations:
Configuration 1: regional partner as primary installer. Where the project sits squarely within ALPS Electrical’s core delivery area and meets their specialism, they can deliver the install directly. This is the cleanest path for smaller projects (sub-150 kW typically) where regional proximity and local relationships add the most value.
Configuration 2: regional partner as sub-contractor. Where we’re delivering a larger or multi-building install, ALPS Electrical can deliver specific portions of the scope under our overall project management — typically the electrical interconnection, three-phase upgrade where required, or local trades coordination.
Configuration 3: ongoing operations partner. Once an install is commissioned, ALPS Electrical can provide regional response capability for maintenance, fault response, or warranty work — useful when our central team is hours away from the site and a same-day response matters.
We move between these configurations based on the project specifics. The common thread: ALPS Electrical’s regional knowledge complements our farm-building specialism without duplicating it. You can read more about their capability directly at ALPS Electrical.
Farm-building sector context in Teesside, Cleveland & County Durham
The Teesside, Cleveland & County Durham farming portfolio determines which building types attract the most solar PV investment. Across most Teesside, Cleveland & County Durham farms in 2026, the priority order tends to be:
- Dairy parlours and milking sheds — strongest payback economics thanks to 24/7 bulk-tank cooling and parlour load. Self-consumption typically 88-95%. Combined re-roof + PV on older buildings still pays for itself within the system life.
- Intensive livestock buildings — poultry, pig finishing — with year-round ventilation and lighting loads provide excellent self-consumption baseload.
- Grain stores and arable barns — large clear-span roof areas with seasonal drying-load peaks. Battery storage often pairs well to time-shift summer generation into autumn drying season.
- Equestrian and farm workshops — moderate baseload, slower payback, but typically lower install complexity and biosecurity overhead.
For each building type we model: HH meter data analysis; PVSyst yield forecast; self-consumption ratio specific to the operation; structural and electrical scope; G99 grid connection timeline with the regional DNO; planning context including any Listed Building or AONB considerations; financial model with capital purchase + 100% AIA, asset finance, and PPA scenarios.
How we deliver coordinated projects with ALPS Electrical
The typical project sequence:
Week 1-2: feasibility. We pull the farm’s half-hourly meter data and building dimensions. ALPS Electrical contributes local context — electrical infrastructure typical for the area, regional installer pricing benchmarks, DNO capacity status, any specific planning sensitivities. The desk feasibility study is free; we deliver within 7 working days.
Week 2-4: site survey. A coordinated on-site survey day — our structural and electrical engineers plus ALPS Electrical’s site team. Asbestos sample testing where required. Drone roof imaging for multi-building sites. Initial planning consultation with the local authority if applicable.
Week 4-6: proposal. Fixed-price proposal covering scope, scope split (where applicable) between our team and ALPS Electrical, full PVSyst yield modelling, DCF financial model with three financing scenarios, programme to commissioning.
Month 2-5: design + procurement. Detailed electrical design, G99 grid application submission, panel and inverter procurement (typically 4-8 week lead time), any Listed Building Consent submission.
Month 5-7: install + commissioning. Physical install on site — typically 2-4 weeks per major building, longer for combined re-roof + PV. MCS commissioning paperwork, monitoring portal handover, warranty documentation.
Ongoing: O&M. Annual performance review, alarm monitoring (we can provide active remote monitoring), ALPS Electrical as regional partner for any rapid-response physical visit needed.
This is the standard pattern. For specific projects, the scope split varies — we sometimes deliver the whole project ourselves, sometimes ALPS Electrical runs the build under our project management, sometimes we provide design and specification while ALPS Electrical delivers.
Typical Teesside, Cleveland & County Durham farm solar economics in 2026
For a representative Teesside, Cleveland & County Durham install:
- System size: 100-300 kW per major building; multi-building installs commonly 400-800 kW aggregate
- Capex: £80,000-£250,000 per building (£800-£950 per kW for 100-250 kW systems on direct-PV-ready cladding; £700-£850 per kW for systems above 250 kW)
- Combined re-roof + PV: add £75,000-£260,000 for HSE-licensed asbestos cement removal and profiled steel re-cladding on a typical 2,000 sqm pre-2000 livestock or grain-store roof
- Simple payback: 4.5-7 years before tax relief; 3-5 years after 100% Annual Investment Allowance for incorporated farms at 25% corporation tax
- Annual generation: 90,000-300,000 kWh per major building, depending on system size and orientation
- Self-consumption ratio: 70-95% depending on building type and load profile; remainder exports under Smart Export Guarantee at 8-15p/kWh
Welsh and Scottish farms additionally benefit from devolved scheme grants (Welsh Rural Investment Scheme, Scottish Rural Investment Scheme) that typically provide higher intervention rates than England equivalents.
The project economics for any specific farm depend on the actual HH meter data, building specifics, roof orientation, and DNO capacity. We provide a free desk feasibility study within 7 working days of receiving meter data and building information.
Working with ALPS Electrical
If you’re a Teesside, Cleveland & County Durham-area farm operator scoping a solar install, the right approach is usually to start the conversation with us (we handle desk feasibility, fixed-price proposals, and overall project delivery) and discuss whether the regional partnership with ALPS Electrical fits your specific project profile.
For projects where local proximity matters most — same-day surveys, rapid response on commissioning issues, ongoing maintenance — the partnership with ALPS Electrical often makes the difference between a smooth project and a frustrating one. Visit ALPS Electrical directly for more on their capability and location, then request a free desk feasibility study from us with your meter data and we’ll structure the right delivery configuration for your project.
The broader UK farm-building solar context — including system sizing, grant landscape, combined re-roof + PV economics, and DNO connection timelines — is covered across our wider farm solar resource library, cost guide, and farm-building specialist pages.
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