Yorkshire Post

Family ‘gaining support’ in fight against solar panel plan for farm

- NATHAN HYDE NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: nathan.hyde@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

A FAMILY fighting to save almost half of their North Yorkshire farm from being covered with thousands of solar panels have claimed they are “gaining support” from the local community and refuse to be “railroaded”.

Robert Sturdy, 50, and his wife, Emma, 42, who run Eden Farm near Old Malton, have been told 130 acres of the land they tend to, which is owned by the Fitzwillia­m Trust Corporatio­n, has been earmarked for a solar farm with up to 92,500 panels.

Harmony Energy, which is looking to submit a planning applicatio­n later this month and lease the land for 40 years, claims the panels could generate enough renewable energy to power 14,000 local homes a year, but the farmers have maintained it will take high-quality farmland out of production.

Mr Sturdy’s grandfathe­r moved to the farm in 1954 and his later father, John, took over in 1971.

He has run the farm since 2014 and now lives there with his wife and their two children Sebastian, seven, and Lizzie, four.

Hundreds have rallied round the family and a group of objectors attended a Malton Town Council meeting last week, when the developers gave a presentati­on on the plans.

“I think they’re willing to support us because we’ve already been granted our tenancy, which is a three-generation tenancy,” said Mrs Sturdy. “Rob has the right to farm this land for his lifetime.”

She added: “This land is occupied and it’s already farmed. We appreciate the place for renewables in the future and the need for them, but it has to be located on low-grade land.

“That means that if they need to go some way further afield from the substation, at an extra expense to them, then so be it.

“I think that’s what people are saying – it’s not okay to just railroad into this community, which is a rural community.”

The National Farmers’ Union has also raised concerns about the project, claiming about 1,000 tonnes of grain could be removed from the food supply chain if solar panels are built on the farm’s arable land.

Harmony Energy has said this site has been earmarked because it needs to build a solar farm near grid substation­s to ensure it can be run without Government subsidies.

The company also said it will help Ryedale District Council hit its target of reducing Ryedale’s net emissions to zero by 2050.

A company spokesman added: “We all have a duty to help combat climate change. This project would be a key contributo­r towards achieving that target, supporting the provision of clean, renewable energy in Ryedale.

“Our proposed developmen­t would see the installati­on of freestandi­ng solar photovolta­ic (PV) panels on agricultur­al land, with the capacity to generate up to 50MW of low carbon electricit­y.”

People are saying it’s not okay to just railroad into this community. Emma Sturdy, whose husband’s family have run Eden Farm since 1954.

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