The Sunday Telegraph

Vast solarl f farms ‘ poised to industrial­ise’ countrysid­e

- By Patrick Sawer

COUNTRYSID­E campaigner­s have warned that large tracts of rural southern England face being ruined by “massive industrial­isation” if plans for one of the country’s largest solar farms are given the go-ahead.

The approval of plans for a large solar power plant in Oxfordshir­e has led to fears of a “tidal wave of solar farms” despoiling rural areas.

Proposals have been made for another four vast solar farms covering between 160 and 340 acres each, close to the Chilterns Area Of Outstandin­g Beauty and the Oxford green belt.

A site planned for Nuneham Courtenay, near Oxford, would be one of the biggest in England at more than 340 acres, with councillor­s set to discuss in the coming months whether to give it approval in the face of mounting opposition from environmen­tal groups.

Enso Green Holdings, a joint venture between Enso Energy and the Green Investment Group, has submitted the plans, which could generate enough power for the equivalent of 13,000 homes each year.

The firm says new grassland habitats would be planted beneath the solar panels, with sheep allowed to graze, and the existing hedgerows and trees on the site would be retained. Enso Energy said: “We’re determined to use the latest solar technology to make a positive impact on the country and communitie­s we work with.”

The proposed solar farms are part of Britain’s push to reduce its carbon footprint and switch to renewable energy.

However, the Campaign for the Protection of Rural England (CPRE) says the scale and “alien appearance” of the Nuneham Courtenay project and other solar farms are an obtrusive impact on the landscape, representi­ng “an unwelcome and inappropri­ate industrial­isation of the countrysid­e”.

The Oxford Preservati­on Trust has also objected to the scheme, saying it would be “highly visible” in the landscape surroundin­g the city.

Currently the largest solar farm in the UK is Shotwick Solar Park, near Deeside in North Wales, which is spread over 250 acres. This would be outstrippe­d by the Nuneham Courtenay proposals, along with separate plans for a 270 acre solar farm on farmland near Thame.

Richard Harding, of Oxfordshir­e CPRE, said: “This area seems to be facing a tidal wave of solar farms – on green field sites and on working agricultur­al land. They represent an industrial­isation of the rural landscape.”

The CPRE argues that solar farms should be built on brownfield sites and not in open countrysid­e.

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