Call for onshore wind farm planning rules to be changed

1 year ago 46
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Wind farm on the PenninesImage source, Getty Images

By Theo Leggett

Business correspondent, BBC News

Future planning decisions about onshore wind turbines should be taken out of the hands of local authorities in England and Wales, government advisors have said.

Instead, onshore wind should be treated as "nationally significant", the National Infrastructure Commission said.

This would allow major schemes to bypass local planning requirements.

There has been an effective moratorium on onshore wind development since 2016.

Guidance on where onshore turbines can be built mean very few new schemes have gained approval, despite the need to shift UK power generation away from fossil fuels and towards renewables to meet 2050 climate targets.

More than two thirds of the UK population are not opposed to onshore wind farms, but 12% of people would not be happy about a wind farm being constructed locally.

In a report, the National Infrastructure Commission recommended that onshore wind schemes should be included in the Nationally Significant Infrastructure Projects framework.

This is a system which allows major schemes to bypass local planning requirements. Until 2016, onshore wind was included in the system, but was later removed, returning decisions over new projects to local authorities.

This, together with the introduction of much tighter planning restrictions in the National Planning Policy Framework, meant very few new projects were approved.

In December last year, the government pledged to relax the restrictions on building onshore wind farms, after a revolt from Tory MPs.

A government spokesperson said that it would respond to the new report and was already "reforming the planning process to clear the path for the energy infrastructure we need".

Last year, the government launched a consultation on possible reforms to the planning system, to make it easier for onshore wind projects to gain approval.

At the time, it said decisions on possible sites should continue to be taken at local level.

Such changes would not affect Scotland, which has its own planning regime, and which has not been covered by the moratorium.

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