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A plan for six wind turbines near Arborfield has been cut to five so they will not interfere with the radar at Heathrow Airport.
The proposal has been drawn up by The University of Reading with Partnerships for Renewables. ...
we have found that the responsible maximum number of wind turbines should now be set at five rather than six.
Senior figures from wind energy firms have been working at the heart of Government, advising ministers on the potential health impacts of turbines, the WMN has learned.
The Government was last night accused of "doing unprecedented and highly questionable favours" for the wind industry amid growing concern about the "clear conflict of interest". ...Questions have also been raised about a move to limit the power for people living near new wind farms to sue operators for negative health impacts caused by noise.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy]
Campaigners battling against a number of wind farm proposals in the Lutterworth area are pooling their resources with other anti-wind farm groups in a bid to strengthen their opposition.
The Stop the Swinford Wind Farm Action Group (SSWFAG) hosted a series of drop-in information sessions for residents at The Chequers pub in Swinford on Tuesday evening.
About 100 people attended the event ...
Currently Mid Wales is the focus of a number of windfarm applications, which could total as many as 19 by the end of the year.
However Councillor Wynne Jones, Powys County Council's portfolio holder with responsibility for regeneration and development, has confirmed that without multi million pound investment in Mid Wales road network there will be no way to transport the necessary components to build the proposed windfarms.
Putting up a small wind turbine on the roof of a suburban home may be a waste of time, according to a new report.
And in future grants for people who want to install small-scale wind turbines should only be given if it can be shown the turbine will actually save on CO2 emissions.
The claims are made in a joint study by the Carbon Trust and Met Office set up to establish whether household wind turbines - so-called microgeneration - will work and whether they can help cut CO2 emissions.
The study shows rural areas tend to deliver more energy than urban ones
Grants for homeowners who want to install small wind turbines should assess whether the structure saves carbon emissions, a report has said.
The Carbon Trust study says turbines in urban homes may not generate enough electricity to counter CO2 emissions created by their manufacture and use.
It said grant schemes should consider whether the likely carbon savings of small wind turbines are "reasonable".
Campaigners were jubilant last night after controversial plans to build a windfarm in the south Norfolk village of Hempnall were unanimously refused.
More than 100 local people packed into the chamber at South Norfolk Council's headquarters in Long Stratton to listen to the debate over plans by renewable energy company Enertrag UK to build seven 125m high turbines on land at Bussey's Loke.
The proposals had been recommended for refusal and were last night unanimously turned down by the council's south-west area planning committee. Enertrag said that it would appeal the decision.
Parachute instructors are "sky high" after a planning application that could have grounded their business was thrown out by planners.
Plans to build two wind turbines near Shotton Airfield have been dismissed by a Government inspector because of the impact they would have on Peterlee Parachute Centre (PPC).
An instructor at the only parachute centre in North East England says the decision has not only saved the centre, but safeguarded the sport in the region.
Six homeowners living near the site of a proposed wind farm in the Vale of Belvoir are demanding council tax discounts because they say the plans have caused their house prices to fall.
The move comes after Julian and Jane Davis, who were forced from their Deeping St Nicholas home after turbines were built 930m away, successfully appealed to have their council tax banding lowered to a Band A.
A valuation tribunal ruled last week that the construction of the wind farm close to the Davis' home had a "significant detrimental effect" on their enjoyment of their home and would have "some effect on the potential sale price".
Alex Salmond yesterday said the past ten days were the most exciting in the history of renewables in Scotland, as he gave the go-ahead for a major wind farm to expand.
Another nine turbines will be built alongside the 77 already given approval at the Crystal Rig wind farm, near Dunbar in East Lothian.
E.ON, Dong Energy buy Shell's London Array stake
July 21, 2008 by Monicca Egoy in Thomson Financial News
July 21, 2008 by Monicca Egoy in Thomson Financial News
German energy group E.ON and Danish utility Dong Energy have agreed to acquire Royal Dutch Shell's 33 percent stake in the 1,000-megawatt wind farm project in Britain, known as London Array, for an undisclosed sum.
The pair, each owning a one-third stake in the project currently, are to become 50-50 partners in London Array which, once finished, could supply electricity to over 750,000 homes. ...Both E.ON and Shell declined to provide the financial terms of the transaction.
The First Minister told the World Renewable Energy Congress in Glasgow the green light had been given to a 152-turbine project in South Lanarkshire. The chairman of the congress then hailed Mr Salmond as the "saint of renewable energy".
Mr Salmond now expects Scotland to become the green-energy capital of Europe and a major exporter of renewable energy - a move that could bring billions of pounds into the economy. ...
But sceptics questioned whether Scotland was going in the right direction with its strong focus on wind. ...Scotland is too focused on wind power at the expense of other technology based on saving energy and producing clean electricity, which would also be more economical, according to some leading environmental thinkers.
More than 80 plans are currently lodged for new onshore wind farms in Scotland, which could lead to more than 1,600 extra turbines being built across the country.
Residents campaigning against a planning application for three wind turbines have presented a petition to the local authority.
Eileen and David Watson, and Tanya and Paul Davies, all residents of Earthcott Green, have presented a petition of more than 350 signatures, campaigning against an application to build three wind turbines in their village. ...The angry residents presented the petition to Matthew Riddle, South Gloucestershire Council's executive member for community care and housing, on Monday morning.
Also filed under [
Impact on People]
Bosses at the MoD had a deadline of December to submit statements to the ongoing public inquiry into three proposals for turbine developments north of Hexham.
But the ministry was yesterday criticised for submitting a vital proof of evidence to the inquiry ...three months after it had started.
The MoD is objecting to the turbines on the grounds that they will interfere with air traffic control radar and threat radar.
The first objection was submitted with the ministry's statement of case, but the objection on the grounds of threat radar was not submitted to the inquiry until March, a fact that has upset developers.
Dozens of residents came together to discuss controversial plans for a windfarm site in Ulley.
Almost 50 people came together for the meeting which was held at Holy Trinity Church, on Main Street to voice their feelings about the potential site on Penny Hill.
Residents against the proposal have formed The Ulley Windfarm Action Group to try and tackle the plans themselves. ..."We want to keep our countryside and the wildlife - we don't want great big industrial windfarms created, we think it's wrong."
The wind turbine will cost about £700,000 and will be funded through sponsorship and general income. It is hoped that it will reduce the organisation's energy bills by £150,000 annually.
Despite receiving planning permission from Lewes District Council last year, against the recommendations of its own planning officers, the proposals have been hotly contested by some members of the East Sussex community, who feared that the turbine would ruin the stretch of countryside where the opera company is based.
Following a public enquiry in Lewes in February, the case was put to Blears, who issued her final decision today.
Villagers pledge to fight plan for second wind turbine site
July 5, 2008 by Paul Cook in The Northern Echo
July 5, 2008 by Paul Cook in The Northern Echo
Villagers who have vowed to fight plans for nearly a dozen turbines near their homes could face a second wind farm development on their doorstep.
County Durham firm Banks Developments has drawn up proposals to build up to ten turbines on land north-east of Darlington.
The company has started a report for the proposed development, known as the Moor House scheme, between the villages of Barmpton and Brafferton, approximately three miles east of the A1(M).
Detailed proposals are still being drawn up, but it is expected the farm would include up to ten turbines with a maximum height of 125m to the tip of the blades.
The centrepiece of the Renewable Energy Strategy is a plan to build 7,000 new wind turbines over the next 12 years; 4,000 to be located off the coast and 3,000 more dotted around the country. The 4,000 offshore turbines, each the size of Blackpool Tower, will have to be lowered into the seabed at a rate of more than one every working day between now and 2020 - that's a turbine for every half mile of coastline. More than £100bn will need to be invested for the plan to come to fruition. ...To come up with that £100bn, the Government is laying out a slew of incentives to the private sector.
Wells lifeboat rescued a yacht with engine failure which was drifting dangerously close to a new wind farm off Skegness. ...Wells lifeboat press officer John Mitchell said it was too early to say whether the wind farm, which is still being constructed, was likely to present more problems for sailors and result in more calls to the coastguard but it was something they were monitoring.
A wind farm developer refused permission to erect turbines in Northumberland has lodged an appeal. Catamount Energy has challenged the decision of Berwick Borough Council's planning committee in March to reject its proposal to put up six turbines at Barmoor, between Ford and Lowick.
The application had been amended from an original nine turbines and recommended for approval.
But councillors felt the wind farm would have an unacceptable impact on the Northumberland landscape which could not be mitigated and voted 8-1 against.