Q-C1.2: Are there any other criteria which should be considered when assessing proposals for large scale renewable energy developments?

Showing forms 1 to 30 of 55
Form ID: 72336
Respondent: Mr Robert Sherman

It would be a useful option if the local community or local community energy organisation had the possibility to buy into (by public share offer, crowdfunding etc) and thus own a part of any commercial large scale solar or wind farm, if they want to. Installers usually provide an initial local community benefit but a community that actually owned however small a part of the whole could thereby have a steady income for community projects..

Form ID: 72478
Respondent: Mr Roger Lloyd

The use of contaminated agricultural land should be designated for solar farms with wind turbines restricted to those areas away from areas of OPutstanding Natural Beauty or National Parks.

Form ID: 72881
Respondent: Mr Darrell Muffitt

No answer given

Form ID: 73424
Respondent: Mrs victoria Palmer-Gee

Impact on the landscape and surrounding areas.

Form ID: 73589
Respondent: Mr michael dufty

THIS SEEMS AN ADEQUATE LIST

Form ID: 73761
Respondent: DR Angela Quartermaine Carr

All the above seem appropriate

Form ID: 73913
Respondent: Mrs Anna Corser

No answer given

Form ID: 74167
Respondent: Cllr Andrew Day

Contribution to creating or enhancing pubic footpaths / bridleways

Form ID: 74232
Respondent: Mr James Dex

More options should be considered for providing group heating sustainable for villages or even urban areas as is the norm in Scandinavia. Removes the need for individual home heating systems

Form ID: 74470
Respondent: Mrs Margaret dufty

SHOULD BE SYMPATHETIC TO AGRICULTURE AND NATURE

Form ID: 74656
Respondent: Mrs Emma Stolwood

All planning applications for large scale renewable energy must be supported by a comprehensive LVIA to assess the landscape and visual impact. It is possible to find sites where there will be a negligible LVI

Form ID: 74831
Respondent: Mr Richard Thomas

The routes of cabling to feed the generated output, how they too impact the other criteria. The speed with which the site can be brought to generation..

Form ID: 75265
Respondent: Shipston on Stour Town Council

Employment opportunities provided by R&D activities associated with renewable energy and green technologies.

Form ID: 75542
Respondent: Dr Malcolm Strens

Dual use for agriculture

Form ID: 75653
Respondent: North Warwickshire Borough Council

Recommend mix of Option C1.1a (if evidence of site suitability available) and C1.1b. No further comments.

Form ID: 75891
Respondent: whitnash town council

nsure agricltural sites used are still capable of use as farmland

Form ID: 76248
Respondent: Wellesbourne and Walton Parish Council

The quality of the arable land should be considered. Considering the need for food sustainability, using prime agricultural land for this is not appropriate.

Form ID: 76331
Respondent: Beasale, Haseley, Honiley and Wroxall Parish Council

We should look to a roof-tops first policy rather than land, as this minimises the land take and leaves more free for agricultural food production. We are definitely against a policy that allows speculative applications to build solar farms on greenfield land. This should be avoided in the Plan.

Form ID: 76341
Respondent: Mr stephen bettany

proximity of nearby areas of natural beauty or national parks

Form ID: 76392
Respondent: Mr Jim Kirkwood

Protection of the green belt must be a key factor in site selection

Form ID: 76588
Respondent: Mr Joe Hibbert

Agricultural land classification needs to be reconsidered. The classification system is archaic and no longer reflects advancements in technology and modern agricultural practice. The most recent and largest solar farm approved in South Warwickshire in Bishops Itchington last year had its biggest ever yielding harvest but was approved on the basis it was on Grade 3b land. Consideration and considerable weighting needs to be given to the industrialisation of open countryside. This needs upmost protection. Renewable energy development must not be the precedent or driver for further industrial development in a rural area.

Form ID: 76910
Respondent: Warwick District Green Party

This local plan should require all new buildings to be equipped with appropriate levels of PV panels. This should at least provide the electricity to match the Energy Use Intensity (EUI). The document clearly sets out the need for consideration of the impact of landscape and heritage assets, the loss of agricultural land and the sterilisation of mineral reserves. The latter is not quite accurate as solar and wind farms are not permanent fixtures. Community support is also important and consideration should be given to the immediate community to a new facility benefiting in terms of a reduction to their cost of electricity for the time that the development is in place. This may provide a driver for certain communities to ask for solar farms and on shore wind developments. There are a small number of community wind schemes (e.g. Ripple Energy) where the public has the opportunity to buy shares in a wind farm and get a return in electricity cost reduction. There are the significantly large areas of roofs on both residential and non residential buildings that could be equipped with PV. This could include schools, warehouses, public buildings etc.

Form ID: 77485
Respondent: Jenny Bevan

Impact on neighbouring residents through noise or loss of amenities

Form ID: 77620
Respondent: Mr Andrew Klapatyj

Impact on local communities regarding noise.

Form ID: 77782
Respondent: Mr Craig Mander

Policy should ensure roof space is allocated for renewable energy production. Large warehouses have huge unused roof spaces for example which, with government led policy, could be utilised for green energy. This would mean space which could be allocated to agriculture/green belt/housing can be used for such rather than large solar/wind farms. Where land/space is in demand we need to utilise our roof and air space more effectively.

Form ID: 77959
Respondent: Great Alne Parish Council

Possible impact on residents in dwellings close to any proposed developments

Form ID: 78346
Respondent: Burton Dassett Parish Council

Only to be in areas where the land is flat and cannot be viewed from an elevated position, close to a sub-station for distribution to the grid, not close to nearby areas of natural beauty or national or country parks.

Form ID: 78503
Respondent: Mr Keith Wellsted

The extent to which the development will help to avert the climate emergency - this ought to be the overarching criteria

Form ID: 78610
Respondent: Bearley Parish Council

Renewable energy should not usurp agricultural land for food production

Form ID: 78679
Respondent: Bearley Parish Council

Renewable energy should not usurp agricultural land for food production