This amended planning application comes up for decision at the planning committee of South Cambs District Council next week. the applicants have pushed back the solar panels away from the drift track that runs through the middle of the land to reduce the visibility of the panels but there is still a good deal of local opposition. At the moment the planning officers recommendation is to refuse. The land is green belt though not high class arable land.
I will be setting out my views to the planning committee as the local member for thriplow and Heathfield. The parish council also have an extraordinary meeting to consider the latest plans later this week.
County councillor for ten Cambridgeshire villages: Pampisford, Ickleton, Duxford, Fowlmere, Gt Abington, Thriplow, Whittlesford, Little Abington, Babraham, Hinxton. District councillor for the communities of Whittlesford, Heathfield and Thriplow.
Showing posts with label solar farm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label solar farm. Show all posts
Monday, 30 December 2013
Sunday, 29 April 2012
Nice people, terrible weather in Thriplow

Discussion with people ranged from solar panels, whether or not Thriplow could sustain development for further housing, making the bridleway to Whittlesford all-weather, and how to make best use of the funds paid over by previous developers.
And some kind people invited me in so that I could dry off by their fire - yes, a fire at the end of April. I'm beginning to think we had our summer in March.
Wednesday, 25 April 2012
Next wave of solar panels hitsThriplow
Talking to Thriplow residents of Sheralds Croft council houses this evening - some of whom have their South Cambs and Savills solar panels installed, others are about to have them, following a survey to make sure the house is well-insulated.
This is a new govt requirement, which does make sense, because there isnt any point in putting solar panels or heat pumps or whatever into a house if its basic insulation is poor.
Climate change or not, I do wish it would stop raining every evening.
This is a new govt requirement, which does make sense, because there isnt any point in putting solar panels or heat pumps or whatever into a house if its basic insulation is poor.
Climate change or not, I do wish it would stop raining every evening.
Thursday, 12 April 2012
Bring me sunshine!
Clearly some roofs, because of their direction, are not suitable as they won't get enough sunlight for it to make economic sense.
Labels:
climate change,
housing,
solar farm,
thriplow,
whittlesford
Saturday, 7 April 2012
Thriplow in the sun!

Talking to an elderly gent whose council house has the new District Council funded solar panels on the roof - reckons it is very good indeed - it will save him a lot of money.
He said that they have adapted to make the best use of the power, so rather than being on Economy 7 at night, they run the washing machine in the early afternoon. Simple things like this will make a big difference.
Tuesday, 27 March 2012
fiat lux
I've got an email from delighted people from Sheralds Croft in Thriplow that their request to me to help get solar panels for their next door neighbour's roof has been successful. Originally their apple tree blocked out the light but since the tree was removed all is well.
These are some of five hundred South Cambs District Council council houses having solar photo-voltaic (PV) panels installed. The cost of the panels and installation work is being met by Savills Solar, and properties have been chosen following a survey last year which identified those roofs capable of producing the most electricity. This low-carbon renewable energy is available to tenants free of charge during daylight hours, and it is reckoned this will save about £150 per year in electricity bills. People in Thriplow told me the installation went very well.
Any surplus energy is sold to the national grid which also helps to pay back costs.
These are some of five hundred South Cambs District Council council houses having solar photo-voltaic (PV) panels installed. The cost of the panels and installation work is being met by Savills Solar, and properties have been chosen following a survey last year which identified those roofs capable of producing the most electricity. This low-carbon renewable energy is available to tenants free of charge during daylight hours, and it is reckoned this will save about £150 per year in electricity bills. People in Thriplow told me the installation went very well.
Any surplus energy is sold to the national grid which also helps to pay back costs.
Friday, 24 February 2012
no light, no light
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The south cambs council deal with Savills means that even tho' the government pulled the rug on feed-in-tariffs before Christmas, 250 of our council houses will still get solar panels and start to get the benefits of low-carbon energy.
But maybe one house won't, because when the surveyors did the initial assessment, the neighbour's tree cut out the light over the roof. The neighbours cut the tree down, and they want to make sure their good neighbour gets his solar panel. But the paperwork now needs to catch up, so we are chasing the Communities and Local Government Department to see if this can be done, otherwise cutting the tree down will have been in vain.
Will one solar panel in Thriplow make a difference - dunno - but its good to see people getting behind sustainable energy and looking out for their neighbours.
Sunday, 11 December 2011
Whittlesford solar panels are go!

But they did it!
The South Cambs district planners did their bit by getting the planning permission sorted.
Also had a session with the South Cambs climate change team and they reckon they can help Cambourne Parish Council with their plans for low-carbon energy sources on the major buildings at Cambourne such as the new sports centre. The revenue from these will not be huge, but it will give them enough to fund some sustainable activities.
Labels:
climate change,
green,
solar farm,
whittlesford
Saturday, 12 November 2011
solar panels go ahead for village hall
Made a tough decision not to go ahead with solar panels for South Cambs district office roofs, but the numbers just didn't stack up after the tariff was cut. Went on BBC Radio Cambs to talk it through last evening. Interesting discussion with presenter Andy Burrows who seemed pretty well informed.
Closer to home, the village hall is further advanced as a project (and a bit smaller) so parish council this week took decision to ask village hall committee to press ahead. The panels need to be on the roof by December, and connected up - so all systems go!
Closer to home, the village hall is further advanced as a project (and a bit smaller) so parish council this week took decision to ask village hall committee to press ahead. The panels need to be on the roof by December, and connected up - so all systems go!
Wednesday, 2 November 2011
panels, panels everywhere

South Cambs itself is looking to see if the panels planned for the Camborne council offices are also doable in time. The poeople losing out are the tenants of council properties, because that scheme looks now to be a non-starter. Govt Minister Greg Barker says there will be a community tariff for that sort of scheme - bring it on and lets get started.
Sunday, 30 October 2011
What will Energy Minister Greg Barker say?

Later in the day he will be giving a talk.
Hope it isn't to announce that photovoltaic panels on roofs, if not installed by end of the year, will not qualify for the high feed-in-tariff, which is a rumour going round on green websites and blogs.
More likely he will be making a very strong link between insulation and feed in tariffs. This does make sense, because there isn't any point in having all this alternative energy if your house or your school or the village hall or whatever rattles about and loses heat every time the wind blows.
We'll have to see - if the tariff does go down, it will be a challenge to make the numbers stack up for South Cambs who are putting panels on council-owned properties, and here in Whittlesford, where we want to put the panels on the village hall, Duxford Imperial War Museum, panels to go on one of the hangars, and William Westley school, who are thinking the same.
The village hall and the school are reasonably new buildings, so their energy efficiency rating should be good.
Just off to stuff some paper in the cracks in this house....
Labels:
climate change,
green,
IWM,
planning,
solar farm,
whittlesford
Monday, 26 September 2011
Whittlesford when global warming really kicks in ...
This is the sort of community "green payback" initiative that the government's energy incentive schemes are supposed to encourage, so good that we are leading the way. Well done to the Memorial Hall Management Committee for doing the maths and putting together the bid.
Tuesday, 22 March 2011
solar farms - not quite so much subsidy
The proposal for a solar farm on fields between Thriplow and Whittlesford may not be built after all. The subsidy for solar power that made these schemes viable is being quickly reviewed by the government, and could mean the feed-in tariff rate paid per kilowatt (over a 25 year period, guaranteed) cut from over 30 pence to 8 pence for large schemes of over 5 megawatts.
This means that household and school/village hall solar panel installations will still get a good rate of return, but the schemes for 250 or so panels in a field will not. I think this is a good move, and I was on the very listenable andy harper show on radio cambridgeshire yesterday morning to say why. This will take the edge of a market that was in danger of rapidly over-heating (no pun intended).
But watch this space for government plans to make putting up with wind turbines more attractive, by giving the business rate paid by the turbine company to the local community. No easy answers on energy at the moment.
This means that household and school/village hall solar panel installations will still get a good rate of return, but the schemes for 250 or so panels in a field will not. I think this is a good move, and I was on the very listenable andy harper show on radio cambridgeshire yesterday morning to say why. This will take the edge of a market that was in danger of rapidly over-heating (no pun intended).
But watch this space for government plans to make putting up with wind turbines more attractive, by giving the business rate paid by the turbine company to the local community. No easy answers on energy at the moment.
Thursday, 3 February 2011
Solar farm proposals at Thriplow drift - background

Suddenly there is all this activity to spread solar panels across packets of countryside. These are not community schemes for putting panels on school roofs, but industrial scale proposals backed by investors, who are taking advantage of the favourable rates for electricity that the government has offered. They may be a really good idea, but we need to have the debate now about something that will still be there a quarter of a century later? Who gets the best deal out of this – the people, the planet, or the investors? Click here for an excerpt from my radio cambridgeshire interview
We are now into double figures in terms of sites across Cambridgeshire, with planning decisions having to be made soon about Bourn and Chittering. There are also proposals for Croydon near Royston, and at Thriplow, near Wilburton and at Ickleton. With the exception of Cornwall, where proposals are about nine months further ahead in terms of planning applications, there is nothing like this any where else in the UK. I guess we have both the spots of low-grade farmland (between the generally pretty high-grade fields) and, more critically, the good connections to the National Grid that these people are looking for.
I think the reason for this surge of activity is the money these schemes will make for their backers by supplying electricity into the national grid at a rate guaranteed for the next 25 years. That fixed price, called the feed-in tariff (FiT), is currently set at just under 30 pence a kilowatt for these schemes generating up to 5 megawatts. But anything built after March 2012 gets 5p a kilowatt less. So for an investor seeking a maximum return, guaranteed for 25 years, this all has to be up and running in the next 12 months – which isn’t a long time in planning terms.
The government has said what it calls “clean energy cashback” will allow many people to invest in small scale low carbon electricity, in return for a guaranteed payment both for the electricity they generate and export. And the cost of paying for this tariff will be met out of our electricity bills. Should we in Cambridgeshire be doing something equally quick to build our own solar parks – after all it is our county. The problem is the up-front cost. It could be £50 to 100k to put panels on a school. These solar farms are costing more like £12million to build, and typically need about 35 acres of land.
Solar farms may have great potential – Kevin McCloud from TV’s Grand Designs is a supporter so they must be a good thing. But we do need to understand the returns for everyone involved. How much profit over the 25 years will the investors make compared with the payments they are offering local landowners and support for communities? Is it a fair return or not?
Will this activity drive down the cost of building solar panels – in other words, a price worth paying because of the knock-on benefits? If most of these developments are about putting up panels in a field, then how much technology and know how will be transferred to putting panels on school roofs?
How much employment will these solar parks provide? The solar industry talks about tens of thousands of jobs being created. Once the panels are in place – a six month build – then how much more is there to do for 25 years apart from maintenance and mending the fences round the site?
Update for 2013: I read recently about solar panels installation on Trinity College, Cambridge, and it reminded me of the meeting I chaired last year with conservation officers at South Cambs District council. We were trying to work out how to strike a balance between the need to keep buildings representing the reason they were listed in the first place, and recognising that different energy sources can keep buildings useful and functioning rather than just museum pieces. That's not always easy, but it is worth trying to find that balance.
Saturday, 29 January 2011
solar farm proposals at Thriplow drift

This is a bit of a first, as there are currently about six applications in with south cambs seeking to put up solar panels, and a similar number down in Cornwall, but nothing actually up and running yet. So uncharted territory. Obviously far less impact on the countryside than a wind turbine - but less electricity generated.
It was helpful to understand more about the proposal, how it would work, and what impact there would be on the environment from the panels. For example, the panels don't require full sun to operate, so even on a dull winters day they generate some power. Thriplow Parish Council intend to hold a public meeting on this proposals - date to be advised.
Friday, 21 January 2011
solar farm proposals at Thriplow drift

The panels would be over six foot high and be two feet off the ground, so eight foot in all.Well, we've had plenty of wind farm applications - another meeting about the Heydon Grange Wind Farm coming up in mid-Feb - so I guess it was only a matter of time before this popped up.
Labels:
climate change,
planning,
solar farm,
thriplow
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