Appearance
A virtual power plant in Cornwall is paying households £40 a month
The houses look like any other Cornish stone-and-render — slate roofs, gull-proofed bins, a wood-burner permit pinned in the window. What is different is what sits in the airing cupboard: a hybrid inverter with a Modbus connection back to a controller in Bristol, and a 9.6 kWh lithium battery rented from Centrica on a 10-year fixed-fee contract.
Multiplied across 1,400 homes — concentrated in Penzance, Camborne, and a long thin spine down to Helston — that hardware adds up to roughly 7 MW of dispatchable capacity. The trade name is the Cornwall Virtual Power Plant, and as of April 2026 it is the second-largest residential VPP in the UK by participating meter count, after Octopus's Saving Sessions panel.
The headline number is the cheque. Households on the standard tariff are receiving payments averaging £38–42 a month, settled quarterly, and ratepayers near the top of the participation league are clearing closer to £55. None of this is speculative; the figures come straight from the Q1 2026 settlement statements that Centrica is required to publish under the Cornwall Council co-development agreement.
Where the money comes from
The £40 is the visible end of a five-revenue stack:
- Capacity market — the VPP cleared a 2.6 MW de-rated obligation in the 2025 T-1 auction at £63/kW/year. That's roughly £164k/year flowing to the asset, recycled to households pro-rata.
- Dynamic Containment — the batteries collectively bid into ESO's frequency-response market, clearing typically 1.2–1.8 MW per settlement window at £8–12/MW/h. Net to the VPP: about £210k/year.
- Western Power Distribution flexibility services — the local DNO (now part of National Grid Electricity Distribution) procures localised flex through the Piclo platform. Cornwall VPP holds 3.4 MW of post-fault and pre-fault Sustain contracts. Annual value: ~£95k.
- Octopus Flexible Tariff arbitrage — about half the participating households are on Octopus Agile or Cosy. The VPP optimises charging against the half-hourly price signal. Arbitrage value per battery: £180–240/year.
- Wholesale time-shift — a small slice (~3%) of revenue comes from genuine wholesale buying-and-selling through Centrica's trading desk.
The five revenue streams stack because they target different problems on different timescales. The capacity payment buys winter peak insurance; DC buys second-by-second frequency stability; DSO flex buys localised constraint relief; the tariff arbitrage moves the household's own demand off the daily peak. Each is roughly orthogonal, which is why they sum without much cannibalisation.
Why Cornwall specifically
Cornwall is over-generating renewables at the distribution level. Roof-mounted solar exceeded the daytime aggregate demand of the Lower Penwith feeder network on 64 days in 2024 and 91 days in 2025; the trajectory is obvious. Without local storage, the surplus reverses up through the 33 kV network and trips reverse-power protections, which is bad for the kit and bad for the DNO's nerves.
The Cornwall VPP exists in part because Western Power needed a way to absorb that surplus locally, and because Cornwall Council has been unusually willing to use European Regional Development funding — pre-Brexit, and a chunk of UK Shared Prosperity Fund afterwards — to underwrite the upfront battery installation. Households pay £0 upfront, a £14/month maintenance subscription that comes off the dispatch payments, and own the battery outright after the ten-year term.
The unspoken precondition is that Cornwall is one of the few UK regions where the DNO is actively asking for distributed storage. In most of the south-east, the local network is built for peak import, not peak export, and DSO flex contracts are correspondingly thinner.
What didn't work
Two things missed expectations.
First, residential demand response without storage — the "turn your washing machine on at 2am" model — proved hard to monetise reliably. Centrica trialled a 600-home cohort with smart-plug-only assets in early 2025 and saw average dispatch payments of £6–9/month — too small to drive engagement. The cohort was rolled into a battery-rental option by Q3.
Second, the heat-pump integration is still experimental. The current pilot ties about 80 ground-source pumps into the VPP's flex stack via OpenADR signals, but the modelling overhead — predicting how much pre-heating a house tolerates before a complaint — is enough that the £/kW economics are marginal. Octopus's Cosy heat-pump tariff is doing better on the same problem, but only because it relies on customer behaviour rather than direct dispatch.
The transferable bit
The Cornwall design is not a special case in any meaningful technical sense. Hybrid inverters, residential batteries, and Modbus aggregation are commodity. What makes it work is the political and regulatory plumbing:
- A DNO that explicitly tenders for localised flex.
- A council willing to underwrite hardware so that the household entry cost is zero.
- An aggregator (Centrica) that has both the trading desk and the customer-management infrastructure.
- A retail tariff (Octopus Agile or Cosy) that exposes the household to half-hourly prices.
Where those four pieces line up — Greater Manchester, parts of South Wales, the East Anglia coast — the model travels. Where any one of them is missing, it doesn't.
The £40/month is the marketing number. The interesting one is that the VPP cleared its 2025 financial year at £1.18 m operating margin against £4.2 m of revenue — a 28% operating margin on a residential-aggregation business. That is the unit-economics signal that will, over the next 24 months, decide whether the model scales beyond Cornwall.
