Three organizations from across the energy sector have released a report examining how the UK’s solar energy planning system can be improved to meet renewable energy capacity targets.
Trade body RenewableUK, rural charity CPRE and sustainable business organization Aldersgate Group have released the interim findings of their investigation into the UK’s onshore renewable energy planning system in a report titled Insights for the low-carbon electricity system: journeys through planning.
The report, which focuses on Nationally Important Infrastructure Projects (NSIPs), examines the successes and failures of the planning system from the point of view of three types of users: energy developers, local communities and the environment, which was labeled as a “user” of the planning system. the requirements for environmental consideration within these processes.
Overall, this phase of the research identified five key issues with the current NSIP regime. These are the lack of strategic plans, joint policy and public involvement, system-wide challenges, difficulties in obtaining adequate data efficiently, inherent uncertainties in the process that exacerbate other problems, and the need for complex trade-offs to balance competing interests to bring. interests.
As such, the report’s authors made several early recommendations to improve the system, urging the government to involve planning experts, communities, environmental groups and infrastructure developers in developing upcoming policy changes and also noting that the government should invest in capacity building.
This report is the first phase of a detailed investigation. More detailed findings and policy recommendations will be published this fall. The next phase of this project will explore the ideas of strategic planning in more detail and how it can help address existing challenges in the system and develop best practice ideas for early involvement in the planning process.
Solar NSIPs, planning challenges and the environment
The planning process for solar projects has been in the public spotlight recently, with the new Labor government granting development consent orders (DCOs) for three solar NSIPs for which planning decisions had previously been deferred by the previous government.
More recently, Secretary of State Matthew Pennycook granted planning permission for a 23 MW solar project with 57 MW of battery storage. Although not an NSIP, this project has attracted attention for its somewhat turbulent approval process, having previously been approved by Warwickshire District Council in 2023, before the then Secretary of State for the Department for Leveling Up, Housing and Communities was ‘called’. or took over, planning decisions regarding the project after a Conservative MP called for planning permission for the project to be refused. Since taking on the role of Foreign Secretary, Matthew Pennycook has voiced his support for the UK’s solar sector.
Meanwhile, the report notes that environmental NGOs generally viewed the NSIP process positively, highlighting the potential benefits of some forms of energy infrastructure as an opportunity for nature restoration. Solar energy projects, in particular have been identified as potential “biodiversity refuges”, and many major studies are currently underway into the potential benefits of solar farms for local biodiversity.
A version of this article was first published on our sister site Current±. You can read the original here.