The Fayetteville Observer

UK lifts de facto ban on onshore wind farms

Eases restrictio­ns on plans with local support

- Sylvia Hui ASSOCIATED PRESS

LONDON – Britain’s Conservati­ve government relaxed planning rules Tuesday and lifted restrictio­ns that effectivel­y banned the building of new onshore wind farms in England.

Rules introduced in 2015 by then Prime Minister David Cameron, who also led a Conservati­ve administra­tion, allowed a single objection to a wind turbine applicatio­n to block its developmen­t. The regulation­s led to a dramatic decline in the number of new turbines granted planning permission.

Some Conservati­ves pressured the current government to overturn the rules. Lawmaker Alok Sharma, who was president of the 2021 U.N. climate change conference and led the lobbying campaign, called them “outdated” and “not a sensible way for a planning system to operate.”

Authoritie­s said Tuesday that the eased restrictio­ns mean onshore wind projects supported by local residents will get faster approval. They said elected local officials will have the ability to make final decisions based on the prevailing view of their communitie­s, not just a small number of objectors.

Communitie­s that back wind turbines in their areas will also benefit from cheaper electricit­y, officials said, adding that the way such energy discounts work would be considered later.

Environmen­tal groups said Tuesday’s decision, which took immediate effect, was overly cautious and that too many obstacles to building wind turbines in England still exist. Greenpeace called the changes “feeble tweaks” and “just more hot air from the government.”

“Today’s small step forward leaves new onshore wind in England still facing higher planning barriers than anything else, including new coal mines, and it will still be too difficult for communitie­s which want wind to get it,” said Alethea Warrington, the senior campaigner at climate advocacy group Possible.

Renewable energy made up 42% of the U.K.’s electricit­y generation last year. Much of it came from offshore wind farms. Experts have warned that onshore wind energy production must be scaled up rapidly for the U.K. to meet its climate change goals.

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