Wednesday, February 25, 2026
Google search engine
HomeEnvironmentDevon CPRE says “enough is enough” after approval of 157 new solar...

Devon CPRE says “enough is enough” after approval of 157 new solar farms

Devon CPRE’s response to yesterday’s announcement that the Government has approved 157 new solar farms and the largest onshore wind scheme in England for a decade (Cornwall’s Imerys Wind Farm)

Comments from Devon CPRE’s Chair Steve Crowther: “These headlines are shocking; however, actually these 157 solar farms already have planning permission. We do all need to now say ‘enough is enough’ before our countryside is desecrated beyond recognition, with nothing left to enjoy or protect. 

“The government keeps pushing out the line about how more wind and solar will lower everybody’s electricity bills.  But we all know the opposite is true. Do they think the public are fools? The boss of British Gas has warned that electricity in Britain is on track to cost more in 2030 than it did during the energy crisis triggered by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

“The original ethos behind all renewable energy schemes was that they would be ‘temporary blights on the landscape’, typically for about 25 years. As solar panels age, their efficiency decreases by between ½ and 1% per year. After about 30 years the benefit from a solar farm falls to such an extent that it can no longer be argued that it outweighs the harm to the landscape and the loss of productive farmland. ‘Indefinite’ consents are presented as meaning that the equipment will be removed when it has fully decayed; but in practice it means that they will be constantly replaced with new equipment. Indefinite effectively means ‘in perpetuity’.

“Our thoughts about another large wind farm in Cornwall? Unprintable! Devon CPRE led the opposition to numerous onshore wind turbines and wind farms over a decade ago.  The landscape, particularly in north west Devon where there are so many, has been fundamentally altered. And now wind turbines are getting much taller, so they have significantly more impact over a wider area.

“We know that rural communities don’t want these huge wind and solar developments imposed on them. Yet so often their opinions count for nothing. There’s nothing democratic about a planning system that allows this to happen.”

Extract from a recent Devon CPRE e-bulletin: “There is now a further sign that the battle to retain Devon’s landscape of prime grassland rather than glass-and-steel is going to intensify.

One of the arguments which has consistently been used to justify the handing over of farmland to solar energy is that this is just a temporary change of use. Originally, 20 years, then 30, then 40 years was the ‘temporary’ period for which permission was applied. It was argued that the land would be returned to agriculture unharmed, and even apparently enhanced, at the end of that permitted duration.

Well, we have now received notice of two applications to convert those ‘temporary’ consents into ‘indefinite’ periods of time; one in Shebbear in Torridge and the second near Morchard Bishop in Mid Devon. While the former argues on a commercial basis, the latter comes with an attempted environmental justification, claiming that solar farms have three times more birds than arable farmland. This claim is based on a study by Cambridge University; one wonders whether it was conducted on the flatlands of East Anglia or the rich hedged pastures of Devon.

Both of these applications state that the land will be returned to agriculture ‘when the solar farm ceases to generate electricity’. But that will only happen if decaying solar equipment is not replaced. If it is, the ‘indefinite’ term will be effectively ‘in perpetuity’. “

CPRE Devon
CPRE Devonhttps://www.cpredevon.org.uk/
CPRE is an independent local charity that fights to prevent poor planning and bad policies destroying the rural landscapes that are Devon's unique heritage.
RELATED ARTICLES

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisment -
Google search engine

Most Popular

Recent Comments