Greenwash? UK Solar Farms Push Agriculture Out Of 62,000 Acres,
Subsidies Greater Than Revenue
Remember all the
fuss about vegetable oil biofuel taking over desperately needed
productive land...?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZRRQdCioXZs
http://tlio.org.uk/greenwash-uk-solar-farms-subsidies-greater-than-revenue-push-agriculture-out-of-62000-acres/
06/05/2020
TONY GOSLING
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZRRQdCioXZs
If 10 GW of solar power were ground-mounted (half the national
ambition for 2020 set by DECC), this, would occupy at most 25,000
hectares (62,000 acres) – just 0.14% of total UK agricultural area (18
million ha) with a negligible impact on national food security. Solar
farms are a temporary and reversible use of farmland – the modules are
typically mounted on screw piles, to be removed at the end of the 25-year
planning consent period, enabling land to return to agriculture.
Public support for solar farms fading says expert
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZRRQdCioXZs
As more large-scale solar projects are constructed, public support for
solar farms will eventually run out an expert in the West Country has
predicted. Solar PV applications have increased by 600% in the South West
over the past year and the projects appear to be growing
larger.
Solar farms receive more cash from green subsidies than selling
the energy they produce
- British energy producers were given generous handouts to introduce
solar farms
- But many make the majority of their cash from the ‘green levy’ on
taxpayers’ bills
- Total subsidy provided to solar electricity generators last year was
about £1.2bn
By COLIN FERNANDEZ ENVIRONMENT CORRESPONDENT FOR THE DAILY MAIL
PUBLISHED: 01:14, 9 April 2018
Britain’s biggest solar farms receive more cash from green subsidies than
from selling the electricity they produce, figures reveal. Energy
producers were encouraged to start solar farms with generous handouts
funded by a ‘green levy’ on taxpayers’ bills. But many of them now make
the majority of their cash from the subsidy – instead of the electricity
they produce.
The total subsidy provided to all generators of solar electricity last
year is estimated to be about £1.2billion. This was part of the
£5.6billion subsidy paid to green energy producers, which critics say
inflates household energy bills. Figures from the Department for
Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (BEIS) following a Freedom of
Information request show ten of the biggest solar farms in the country
pocketed more than £2.5million each in eco-subsidy last year. The payouts
were offered to help increase the amount of ‘green’ energy produced in
the UK.
The solar subsidy is responsible for around £15 a year on a household
power bill. However the system – which guarantees the handouts for 15 or
20 years – has been overly generous. Treasury officials have stopped new
deals being made with solar farms in a bid to stop haemorrhaging huge
amounts of cash. But farms with existing deals are guaranteed generous
handouts until the end of their contracts.

Last year’s biggest beneficiary was the Owl’s Hatch Solar park, in Herne
Bay, Kent. The 200-acre site generated just over 54,000 MWh of
electricity, worth around £2.5million, but was given a handout of
£3.8million. The farm is owned by Cubico Sustainable Investments, which
has seven other smaller solar farms in England.
The nation’s largest installation, Shotwick Solar Park, in Deeside, North
Wales, was handed a £3.5million subsidy, which was pocketed by owner
Foresight Solar Fund. It also generated electricity worth around
£2.5million.
Dr Lee Moroney, of the Renewable Energy Foundation charity, said: ‘The
moratorium on new subsidies to renewables was the right thing to do, but
it is a classic case of shutting the stable door after the horse has
bolted. ‘The legacy subsidies are themselves so high … that Government
must consider retrospective cuts to reduce what is an unreasonable burden
on the consumer and the wider economy.’…