Camber Memorial Hall, Lydd Road, Camber TN31 7RJ. 2-6pm.
Share your feedback with the developers, EDF, at their fourth
community consultation event
Camber Memorial Hall, Lydd Road, Camber TN31 7RJ. 2-6pm.
Lydd Community Hall, Manor Road, Lydd, TN29 9HU
Share your feedback with the developers, EDF, at their final community consultation event
Lydd Community Hall, Manor Road, Lydd, TN29 9HU
7.30-10.30pm
Join us for a fun, non-competitive pub quiz like no other you have known! £5/person with proceeds going to HOOM. Get a HOOM team together an...
7.30-10.30pm
At a full Council meeting on October 1st, Folkestone and Hythe district councillors unanimously supported a petition signed by over 400 residents to protect Romney Marsh from at least three oversized, industrial-scale solar and battery storage schemes.
With support from all political party representatives and independents, the Council voted to refer the petition to the Overview and Scrutiny Committee for further research and recommendations.
Watch the Council meeting here: https://folkestone-hythe.public-i.tv/core/portal/webcast_interactive/1006727 (0:09:00 - 0:30:20)
Three proposals for Nationally Important Infrastructure solar and battery storage (BESS) schemes have been announced for the unique rural Romney Marsh to date, totalling more than 8 square miles, an area three times the size of Gatwick Airport.
EDF’s South Brooks scheme would connect to the 400kV substation at Dungeness requiring cabling to be constructed through sensitive SSSI and Ramsar designated areas.
SSE Renewables and Low Carbon are hoping that National Grid Electricity Transmission (NGET) will build a new 400kV substation somewhere along the transmission lines between Dungeness and Sellindge for their respective schemes to connect to.
In all, the proposals would change at least 10% of the Romney Marsh’s rural open landscape into giant solar and battery storage power stations.
Presenting the petition to the Council Chamber, local resident and co-founder of the Hands Off Our Marsh community group, Amanda Farrant asked the Council,
“As residents, we request that you support our concerns and when it comes to the NSIP Examination process, as a statutory consultee, you do everything in your power to protect Romney Marsh’s unique environment and ecology, its people and economy, its heritage, and the unique character and sense of place that make residents proud to call it home.”
ROOFTOPS NOT RURAL
Green Party councillor Stephen Swaffham said, “Solar energy Is one of the ways we can respond to the current crisis and its an absolute imperative…but we need a measured and proportionate response that takes account of local circumstances.
“I’m really concerned about the solar proposals for Romney Marsh and I wonder who they’re really for… There’s a danger that Romney Marsh will be exploited by big business interests and local residents will pay the price.”
“I’m not in favour of covering large areas of the Marsh with solar panels. There are alternatives. We could perhaps make use of unproductive land, rooftops, brownfield and former landfill sites.”
Independent councillor Paul Thomas said of the South Brooks Energy Park, “The cable tunnels connecting these dispersed sites will be significant engineering structures, connecting to the 400,000 Volt substation at Dungeness… The construction traffic will be hugely impactful on the towns and villages across the Marsh.
“These schemes will also result in 1000s of square meters of concrete being poured on this high-grade agricultural land, with a consequential impact on the drainage.
“The proposed battery storage schemes play no part whatsoever in carbon free generation but are merely proposed to make these schemes financially viable while introducing a significant fire risk and potential land contamination should a fire occur.”
Conservative Party councillor Tony Hills stated, “Once you lose the Marsh, that’s it. There’s no going back on this. It’s a major, major catastrophe waiting to happen, like a slow motion car crash.
“Sadly, many people on the Marsh are already blighted because once those proposals were exposed, they can’t sell a house. The house prices have dropped like a stone. Whatever we do, we should support our residents.”
Reform Party councillor David Wimble said, “My grandfather’s farm has got mile after mile of clay pipe drainage. We’ve gone along to two of the consultations and at both times, the companies knew nothing about them. If you’re going to put footings in for 5m high solar panels, you’re going to go through the very pipes that stop the Marsh from flooding.”
“We’re not against solar. Nobody here’s against solar but it should be on every school roof, every hospital, every barn, everywhere you can put it on, but not on farm land.”
Labour Party councillor Adrian Lockwood said, “We do need clean energy in this country. I can see the attraction of the Marsh. It’s one of the sunniest places in the country and there is a substantial connection to the grid there.
“I think there is probably a way through where we all agree that there could be some solar there, that this district takes its fair share of what we need nationally but it should be our fair share. At the moment, this is totally disproportionate.”
Council leader and leader of the Green Group Jim Martin concluded that he will happily present the results of the petition to the Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero.
Contact: info@handsoffourmarsh.org
Up to 10% of Romney Marsh prime farm land at risk of solar energy industrialisation as third sprawling, new-breed solar and battery storage power station announced
Hands Off Our Marsh, a campaign group representing residents across Romney Marsh, are aghast at proposals for a third giant solar and battery storage scheme that could remove up to 2,700 acres more prime farm land from their unique and historic rural area of south Kent.
EDF and PS Renewables’ South Brooks Solar Farm is proposed for six dispersed land parcels to the north, west and east of the town of Lydd. In total the land could take up an area the size of at least 1.5 Gatwick airports. It would connect to the substation at the former Dungeness Nuclear Power Station, owned by EDF.
The project is considered a Nationally Significant Infrastructure Project (NSIP) which will be decided by the Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero rather than go through local planning.
This new scheme is in addition to the combined 2500 acres, an area equivalent to 1.5 Gatwick airports, that have recently been proposed for South Kent Energy Park surrounding the village of Old Romney and Shepway Energy Park around the village of Newchurch.
Most of Romney Marsh’s farm land is top grade 1 and 2 according to Natural England’s Agricultural Land Classification capable of producing high yields of wheat, potatoes, maize, oil seed rape and other vital crops.
The march of solar sprawl
“We are small rural communities living in a remote and historic environment in south Kent, bordered by the Kent Downs National Landscape to the north. This third proposal for our area in 10 months feels utterly overwhelming for many of the communities on the Marsh,” says the Hands Off Our Marsh group.
“This new breed of solar power plants are giant in comparison to the fairly discreet traditional ‘solar farms’ that we have become used to seeing in fields alongside dual carriageways or dotted about the countryside behind hedges and away from communities.
The Hands Off Our Marsh group fear this scheme will irreversibly damage the unique character, environment, agricultural heritage and tourist economy of Romney Marsh.
“On the vast open landscape of Romney Marsh, it will be almost impossible to hide these giant solar power stations. While the agricultural environment will be severely impacted, the tourist economy will also be hugely affected too. Tourism is a vital part of our economy here. Who will want to come and stay on holiday in what could become one giant sprawling solar and battery storage park?
“We are not against solar power generation, but these schemes should directly benefit communities and businesses by placing them on rooftops and brownfield sites close to where the energy is actually needed. These mega schemes proposed for Romney Marsh will not benefit local communities in any way. In fact they will do more harm by driving people away from the area and putting off tourists.”
The total energy output from the UK’s first giant solar NSIP scheme that is now operational, the 373MW Cleve Hill Energy Park built on Graveney Marshes in north Kent, sold all its future energy output to Tesco and Shell after the scheme was approved.
Key concerns
Whistleblowers not NIMBYs
“We have launched a new petition opposing the South Brooks Solar Farm but we don’t know if it will make a difference,” says Amanda Farrant, one of the founders of Hands Off Our Marsh.
“We are just small rural communities with very few resources up against the power of giant international corporations and a Secretary of State for Energy who is not listening to local community concerns despite what he claims in the media. We are seeing it up and down the country where groups like ours raising valid concerns and objections about these massive NSIP schemes and the harms they will cause, yet we are being completely ignored. We are like sacrificial lambs being slaughtered on the alter of the race to Net Zero by big corporate interests and deaf politicians.”
“With more than 5000 acres of rural farm land and green spaces surrounding our small villages and towns proposed for sprawling mass energy industrialisation, how can we be called NIMBYs? The areas being proposed for energy industrialisation are so much bigger than our back yards. The solar power plants will surround entire communities across an entire district.”
Sign the petition: https://chng.it/pSczQ8qFfs
Contact: info@handsoffourmarsh.org
•An area of farmland the size of Derbyshire is now under threat of solar power development
•The Department for Energy Security and Net Zero has bowed to pressure from mega solar project developers and switched its solar strategy to prioritise the development sector targeting well over half a million acres of farmland
•DESNZ’s strategy shift could crowd out thousands of retail and industrial park rooftop solar schemes, car park panel canopy systems and community-based land sites from connecting to the grid
•The ground-mounted solar pipeline stretches far beyond government claims – it would cover three times the farmland claimed by DESNZ and is almost double the 2035 target
New campaign Stop Oversized Solar is marking its launch today by exposing troubling new figures on planned solar power land-take. Up to 5% of cropland is now at risk of solar development, threatening to take farmland out of use in some of the UK’s best food-producing regions for decades, but more likely for good. Solar sites in the pipeline would cover around 655,000 acres – the equivalent of Derbyshire.
Stop Oversized Solar brings together a group of volunteers from across the UK committed to revealing the real story behind Nationally Significant Infrastructure Project solar mega schemes.
News of this new solar pipeline emerges alongside the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero’s recent decision to change capacity targets in response to solar sector lobbying, making it easier for solar mega schemes – set to take up thousands of acres of farmland each – to get grid connections.
The National Energy System Operator, which is responsible for energy system operations, has already warned that connection queues are over-subscribed for solar.
The solar sector lobbying win could see warehouse, retail and industrial rooftop installations and other small scale, local schemes crowded out of grid connections – even though they are promoted in DESNZ’s new Solar Roadmap. It is also likely to trigger more solar power switch-offs in the summer. NESO has already ordered solar sites to power down this year. Scheme owners are effectively paid to stop generating electricity.
Professor Tony Day of the Stop Oversized Solar campaign said:
“The government’s strategy on solar is wrong – and the solar data that we are exposing is disturbing. The pipeline is now massively over target, with an area of farmland the size of Derbyshire set to be covered in solar panels running into hundreds of millions. The more solar capacity we install, the more we depend on an unreliable source of energy.
“And we are highlighting that targets have been manipulated after lobbying from the highly commercial solar sector, not based on need. We struggle to get even 10% average energy yields on solar, so it’s much more logical to prioritise local solar schemes like commercial rooftop arrays or car park canopies instead of grid-scale mega schemes on good farmland. Now we could see these sensible schemes squeezed out while even more super-sized schemes get the grid connections.
“With hundreds of thousands of acres of UK farmland set to get consent nodded through for a change of use, and many solar developers part of international groups or with international private equity backing, this rural land-grab is controversial and should set alarm bells ringing. We are sleepwalking into a colossal countryside land-take.”
READ the Stop Oversized Solar Briefing Note here
Stop Oversized Solar
The UK’s solar power strategy is fundamentally flawed. It prioritises new solar ‘NSIP’ proposals on farmland on an unprecedented, colossal scale. These mega schemes – typically with the footprint of an international airport – are wrong on every level. That’s why rural community groups from across the country have come together to form Stop Oversized Solar. We cannot support the sacrifice of good farmland for solar, which the government’s own data demonstrates is inefficient. We have serious concerns over the dubious economics of UK solar mega schemes, developer probity and international supply chains. And we cannot stand by and witness the industrialisation of hundreds of thousands of acres of our countryside.
Media enquiries: stop.oversized.solar.uk@gmail.com
Stop Oversized Solar community groups: Block East Pye Solar • Claydons Solar Action Group • East Riding Against Solar Expansion • Fields of Glass • Hands Off Our Marsh • Kingsway Solar Community Action • Mallard Pass Action Group • Say No To Sunnica • Springwell Solar Action Group • Stop East Park Energy • Stop Greenhill Solar • Stop Lime Down • Stop Mylen Leah • Villages Against Solar Threat
Residents of Romney Marsh strongly oppose SSE Renewables’ proposed 1000-acre Shepway Energy Park sited on prime farm land to the north of the village of Newchurch and west of Dymchurch.
The proposed solar and battery storage plant would consist of 200MW of solar energy capacity and 400MW of battery storage to the north and east of Newchurch, and bordering Enviromena’s proposed 100 acre solar energy farm near Dymchurch. The company say it would generate enough electricity to power approximately 73,000 homes and save 49,0000 tonnes of carbon per year.
Members of Hands Off Our Marsh, a local community group, fear this scheme is the latest in a series of giant industrial-scale solar energy proposals that threaten to irreversibly damage the unique character, environment, agricultural heritage and tourist economy of Romney Marsh.
Key concerns
Prime farm land targeted
The huge solar panel and lithium ion battery (BESS) scheme would cover approximately 1000 acres of best and most versatile (BMV) farm land - an area equivalent to the size of 560 football pitches - to the north and Newchurch and west of Dymchurch. It would have an installed generating capacity of 200MW of solar energy and double the amount of battery storage. The scheme would include infrastructure such as solar panels, inverters, transformers, battery storage containers, cabling, security lighting, fencing and CCTV). It also includes a new substation on land which normally grows wheat, peas and oil seed rape. The farm land is also an area where skylarks nest.
Inefficient use of prime arable land
A recent report by the UK Solar Alliance revealed that last year UK solar farms averaged just 9.9% efficiency according to the government’s own figures. This means that the solar plant would generate an annual average of less than 10% of its actual capability due to the intermittency of sunshine in the UK and short daylight hours in winter when electricity is most needed.
“This is a hugely inefficient use of vital top quality arable land that can produce a range of different crops. As weather patterns become more unpredictable, we need to protect the best and most versatile land for adapting our domestic agriculture and growing more climate-resilient crops. Smothering the best and most fertile land in glass panels, battery storage containers and permanent infrastructure like a large substation is irresponsible,” says Amanda Farrant, one of the organisers behind the Hands Off Our Marsh campaign and whose home and creative business will be surrounded by the vast energy proposals.
The UK is currently dependent on imports for at least 40% of our food. The group warn that the current explosion of giant solar energy proposals like this across the country will make us more dependent on imported food from other countries. Importing food will also create additional carbon emissions, what the government is saying have to be cut to meet global Net Zero goals.
Scheme contributes to impending solar sprawl
This new proposal is in addition to Low Carbon’s 1500 acre 500MW South Kent Energy Park and battery storage proposal along the historic Rhee Wall between Brenzett and New Romney, covering an area equivalent to 840 football pitches. Like the SSE proposal, the South Kent Energy Park would remove some of the best farmland on Romney Marsh and in the UK from food production. The South Kent Energy Park’s infrastructure (including solar panels, inverters, transformers, battery storage containers, security lighting, fencing and CCTV) would totally envelop Old Romney village and could harm historic settings such as the church ruins at Midley and Hope All Saints.
The two schemes, just 5 miles apart, would be the largest solar plants in Kent to date, with several more for Romney Marsh believed to be in the pipeline but not yet made public. The schemes would be visible from villages overlooking the Marsh including Ruckinge, Bilsington, Bonnington, Aldington, Court at Street and Lympne.
Both companies’ schemes are considered Nationally Significant Infrastructure Projects (NSIP) as the installed capacity is greater than 100MW. This means they don’t go through the local council for planning permission, instead go through a multi-year national examination process by the Planning Inspectorate with a final Development Consent Order approved by the Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero, Ed Miliband. The first NSIP solar and battery scheme approved for Kent, the 350MW ‘Project Fortress’ at Cleve Hill near Faversham, will go into operation later this year. Aldington’s 99.99MW Stone Street Green Solar project is also currently under examination by the Planning Inspectorate with a decision due soon.
Another energy developer, Enviromena, has also submitted a local planning application with Folkestone and Hythe District Council for a smaller 16MW St Mary in the Marsh solar scheme on approximately 100 acres of fertile arable land just outside Newchurch between Dymchurch and St Mary in the Marsh. This scheme would directly border the Shepway Energy Park.
Quintas Cleantech’s proposed 35MW Pond Wood Solar Farm between nearby Woodchurch and Kenardington is yet another solar scheme which will soon be submitted to Ashford Borough Council’s planning department for consideration.
The reckless solar rush by developers favours green spaces leaving brownfield and rooftops as wasted space
Government and industry claim that only 0.6% of the UK land mass is currently used for solar energy generation. Yet, the UK Solar Alliance report found that, operational and planned NSIP-scale schemes alone already amount to around 1.3% of UK cropland, with yet more smaller ground-mounted solar schemes under construction or in the pipeline, and yet more NSIPs coming to light.
The report found that 23% of the land targeted for solar so far is graded as top grade 1 and 2 in the Agricultural Land Classification system and a further 66% is grade 3. Yet, a CPRE report cites a University College of London study which estimates that there is 650km2 of non-domestic and domestic rooftops and car parks that could be used for solar power instead, in England alone.
Hands Off Our Marsh warn that the rapid expansion of solar developments in rural areas, particularly without thorough strategic government oversight, risks undermining vital national priorities like domestic food production and rural tourism. The group believes that the government needs to take more responsibility over where utility-scale solar energy is being developed to protect vital agricultural assets like Grade 1 and 2 land, rather than leaving it in the hands of energy speculators, investors and landowners to decide where to site Nationally Significant Infrastructure Projects.
“The reckless greenrush by solar energy investors and developers is threatening to overwhelm our important farming, tourism, heritage and nature areas, not just on the Romney Marsh but around the country. Yet rooftops, brownfield sites and car parks remain underused for solar energy generation,” says Amanda Farrant. “Why target the best farm land first, especially given the fragile geopolitical situation today? National food security must not come as a sloppy second behind energy security.”
Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS) pose danger to life near homes and water
Both the SSE Renewables and Low Carbon proposals would include large lithium ion battery storage facilities which allow dispatch of up to one or two hours of stored energy to meet consumer needs when there’s no sunlight. A major report from Professor Peter Edwards and Peter Dobson of Oxford University warns that large BESS could cause catastrophic explosions, toxic gas clouds, and firewater contamination near homes, water supplies and environmental designated sites like Romney Marsh’s nearby Ramsar, SSSI, Local and National Nature Reserves, and Special Protection and Conservation Areas.
The growing number of BESS fires in the UK and other countries is showing that if a battery unit catches on fire, it cannot be put out with water and has to be left to burn out, while residents must stay concealed in their homes to avoid potentially fatal gases, sometimes for days on end.
Hands Off Our Marsh are concerned that there are no safety laws in the UK that deal with BESS and no official guidance exists for fire services dealing with such fires.
BESS are attractive investments for energy developers because they can make large profits by storing generated energy or buying off the grid when energy is cheap and then selling it back into the grid when the price increases at peak times. The proposal from SSE Renewables including double the amount of battery storage capacity for Shepway Energy Park than solar capacity indicates that this might be their intention.
Communities deserve a greater say
Based on experiences from other communities around the country, members of Hands Off Our Marsh are concerned that developers and decision makers are treating statutory community consultation processes as a tick box exercise.
“We see from other large NSIP schemes around the country that community concerns are mostly being ignored as NSIP projects get rubber stamped. The impact on people and wildlife must be given more priority in decision making processes. We are the ones who have to bear the brunt of the impacts, yet receive net zero benefit.”
“While we recognise we need new energy solutions, the best solutions are those that work for local communities and consumers, not just for Ministers’ overzealous targets, or the pockets of developers, investors and landowners.”
The group point out that residents living next to these sprawling schemes, as energy consumers, are ultimately contributing to the costs of them through the huge levies and subsidies added to energy bills which pay for the UK’s Net Zero transition. “We deserve more of a say in what types of energy are most appropriate for our environments and where the new energy infrastructure is best placed. The final decision cannot just rest with one man and his ideological zeal, Secretary of State Ed Miliband.”
New nuclear technology is more viable and would create more jobs locally
Hands Off Our Marsh is calling instead for the latest small modular nuclear reactor (SMR) or advanced modular reactor technology to be installed at Dungeness, the site of two decommissioned nuclear reactors. Small Modular Reactors are more compact than traditional nuclear power plants and require smaller initial investment. They can be deployed in as little as three years due to their modular, factory fabricated design.
“We have the existing skilled workforce and infrastructure on Romney Marsh for nuclear generation. SMR nuclear is a more predictable and stable form of power that would work well in our existing grid system and doesn’t depend on the weather or daylight. It would provide hundreds of jobs here on Romney Marsh, unlike weather-dependent schemes such as the SSE and Low Carbon proposals which will generate very few jobs for local people and could even harm many businesses in the area.”
National Community Walk to raise awareness
Hands Off Our Marsh intends to raise awareness about the threat of an over abundance of ill-thought out industrial solar and battery schemes on Romney Marsh as part of a National Community Walk event on June 8th.
So far 25 walks are planned across counties affected by large solar schemes on vast areas of productive UK farmland.
“We are not NIMBYS. We are walking to blow the whistle about the recklessness of this mad dash to install energy solutions that are unreliable, unpredictable and unsafe, and that also contribute to decreasing the UK’s homegrown food supplies and weaken our national food security.”
The Romney Marsh community walk will set off at 10 am on June 8th from outside the Rose & Crown pub at Old Romney and will follow public footpaths around areas of land proposed for the South Kent Energy Park. To find out more, visit www.handsoffourmarsh.org or contact info@handsoffourmarsh.org.
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