Renewable Energy Triumphs in Lancashire as Solar Farm is Approved Next to Rejected Fracking Site

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Anti-Fracking campaigners have welcomed a local councilโ€™s decision to approve the development of a solar farm just across the road from where Cuadrilla has spent years trying to get permission to carry out hydrolicย fracturing.

The solar farm is expected to produce enough electricity to power around 1,300 homes and save approximately 2,310 tonnes of carbon emissions every year, the equivalent of taking 513 large family cars off theย road.

Fylde Council unanimously approved the application for the Staining Wood solar farm subject to the completion of a habitat regulation assessment, which it looks likely to pass. The site is expected to be operational by Marchย 2016

Siteย Plans

Members of Residents Action on Fylde Fracking (RAFF) who visited the site prior to the planning meeting were impressed with the plans for theย site.

LightSource, the company that intends to develop the solar farm, intends to give the land area dual-use allowing sheep to graze on the solar farm, as well as creating โ€˜enhanced habitat corridorsโ€™ and plant new trees that hope to increaseย biodiversity.

Commenting on the council’s decision, a spokesperson for RAFF said: โ€œRAFF has consistently promoted green energy as an alternative to developing shale gas in Lancashire.ย  As well as providing green energy, the plans for this site will enhance the biodiversity of our area, unlike those of Cuadrilla, which are set to destroy natural habitats, pose a threat to public health, destroy our agricultural and tourism industries, and contribute to globalย warming.โ€

Popularย Support

The council said that it has seen an increase in these types of applications over the last year and they are proving to be popular with localย residents.

Matthew Taylor, the Fylde councilโ€™s Senior Development Officer, said: โ€œWe are finding that across the borough people are more supportive of this type of renewable energyย generation.โ€

He explained how the area was well suited for solar farms given the area’s good connectivity to the national grid, flat land and higher than average levels ofย sunlight.

This news comes as the government has announced it intends to withdraw financial support for solar energy generation in the UK, despite Energy and Climate Change secretary Amber Rudd’s promised โ€œsolar revolutionโ€ inย Britain.

Most recently Panasonic, one of the worldโ€™s largest electronics companies and a major supplier of solar panels in Britain, urged the government to rethink its proposals that could cause โ€œsubstantialโ€ and โ€œirreversibleโ€ damage to theย industry.

Photo: Wikimediaย Commons

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Ben Lucas is currently pursuing an Investigative Journalism Masterโ€™s degree at the City University of London. He has a particular interest in UK and international politics, economics and environmentalย issues.

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