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NP10, NP19, NP20

Solar panels in Newport

Commercial and domestic solar PV installation across Newport and the wider Newport City Council area. NICEIC Approved, MCS certified, 35 years trading.

Solar yield
945 kWh/kWp
Postcodes
NP10, NP19, NP20
Planning authority
Newport City Council
Drive from HQ
55 mi · 65 min

Why solar works in Newport

Newport is the third city of Wales, with a 2021 census population of 159,587. The M4 corridor position makes it one of the strategic logistics nodes of the UK, and the commercial rooftop opportunity here is correspondingly large.

PVGIS modelling for NP10 returns typical annual yields of around 945 kWh per kWp installed for a well-oriented rooftop array at 30 to 35 degrees pitch. In practice that means a 4 kWp domestic array generates roughly 3,780 kWh per year, and a 50 kWp commercial rooftop around 47,250 kWh.

Commercial solar in Newport

M4 logistics corridor city with large-footprint distribution roofs. For commercial operators, the combination of a predictable 945 kWh/kWp yield, current commercial electricity prices at 28 to 32p per kWh, and the Annual Investment Allowance tax treatment means simple payback on a well-sized Newport commercial array typically lands between 3.5 and 6 years.

Worked example: 100 kWp commercial installation

Typical Newport commercial rooftops

We have installed commercial solar across Imperial Park Coedkernew, Queensway Meadows (Amazon), Celtic Springs and other industrial estates in Newport. Typical system sizes range from 30 kWp on smaller trade units to 500 kWp-plus on larger warehouse and factory roofs.

Domestic solar in Newport

For Newport homeowners, a typical domestic installation is a 4 to 5 kWp array paired with a 5 to 10 kWh battery. At 945 kWh/kWp, a 4 kWp system generates around 3,780 kWh in year one, which covers a meaningful share of a three or four-bedroom household's annual consumption once battery storage smooths the time-of-use mismatch. Payback typically lands at 7 to 10 years at current pricing and Smart Export Guarantee tariffs.

Planning and grid connection

The planning authority for Newport is Newport City Council. Rooftop solar PV on commercial buildings almost always falls within permitted development under the Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development) (Wales) Order, subject to the usual 200 mm projection limit and non-listed, non-scheduled-monument conditions. Properties inside a conservation area will typically require full planning permission; we handle the application end-to-end.

For grid connection, systems above 3.68 kW per phase require a G99 application to the DNO. Typical approval timelines are 6 to 8 weeks for Type A (up to 1 MW), which we lodge concurrently with design and procurement so they do not sit on the critical path.

Why FLD for your Newport installation

Start the conversation

If you own a commercial rooftop or a domestic property in Newport (NP10, NP19, NP20) and want a realistic assessment against your actual consumption data, call Paul direct on 01792 680611 or visit our Newport location page for full local detail.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

At 30p/kWh grid electricity, a 100 kWp system generating 95,000 kWh/yr with 70% self-consumption delivers around £24,000 of year-one benefit against c. £85,000 capex, a 3.5-year simple payback. Under Annual Investment Allowance first-year 100% relief, post-tax payback is closer to 2.6 years. South Wales yields 940 to 985 kWh/kWp/year depending on postcode, comfortably enough for commercial solar to be cashflow positive from month one with a PPA.
A Power Purchase Agreement is a financing arrangement where we fund and install a rooftop solar system at no upfront cost. Your business buys the electricity the system generates at a fixed, RPI-indexed rate that is lower than your grid tariff. The PPA typically runs 10 to 25 years. At the end you can extend, buy out at a pre-agreed residual value, or have the system removed. It suits businesses that want immediate savings without capital outlay and that are credit-worthy with a stable site.
If your self-consumption rate sits below about 60%, or your site has significant evening or night load, a battery shortens payback and lifts return. For most daytime-operating warehouses and factories already at 70%-plus self-consumption, batteries are optional and we sometimes advise against them to keep payback tight. We model both cases in the proposal.
G99 is the Engineering Recommendation governing how generation equipment connects to the UK distribution network. For commercial solar above 16 A per phase, you need G99 approval from your District Network Operator before export. In South Wales that is National Grid Electricity Distribution (NGED, formerly Western Power Distribution). Type A connections are the standard sub-1 MW route, typically 3 to 6 months in 2026.

Ready for a fixed-price quotation?

Speak to Paul directly. Most quotes turn around within five working days of a site survey.

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