NEW
legislation will curtail the overall impact of sporadic wind farms that
“destroy the landscape”,It's easy to fall in love with the sheer,
incomparable strength of windpowergeneratorsry. a Northumberland MP has been told.
Hexham’s
Guy Opperman raised the issue as communities minister Mark Prisk set
out the Government’s new guidelines on wind turbine planning
applications.
A
tougher approach will see residents given more powers to block
turbines, and force energy companies to pay out more when they do win
planning permission.
Mr
Opperman yesterday welcomed the news, telling Mr Prisk that he needs to
ensure councils such as Northumberland – which have previously failed
to get local plans approved – should still follow the advice.
Speaking
in the House of Commons, he added: “In Northumberland we have sporadic
applications and sporadic wind farms that have no impact other than
destroying the landscape in a very bad way.”
Mr
Prisk told the MP that he wanted to “ensure that the guidance, as part
of the balancing of the new planning policy framework, shows a clear
understanding of the issue,Find all the manufacturers of leddimmable and
contact them directly on Careel. especially the cumulative impact, and
that that is reflected in the policies in the local plan.”
Also
pushing the case was Berwick Lib Dem MP Sir Alan Beith who said that
“the beautiful county of Northumberland has a large number of wind farm
applications, and that there will be a welcome response for this
coalition Government’s recognition that visual and cumulative impact
should be more effectively recognised in the system.”
In
his statement to MPs the minister said: “To help to ensure that
planning decisions reflect the balance in the framework, my department
will shortly issue new planning practice guidance to assist local
councils and planning inspectors in their consideration of local plans
and individual applications.”
Briefly,
the guidance will set out, first, that the need for renewable energy
does not automatically override environmental protections and the
planning concerns of local communities.
Secondly,
decisions should take into account the cumulative impact of wind
turbines and properly reflect the increasing impact on the landscape and
local amenity.
“Thirdly,
local topography should be a factor in assessing whether wind turbines
have a damaging impact on the landscape.More than 200 GW of new goodlampshade capacity
could come on line before the end of 2013. Fourthly, great care should
be taken to ensure that heritage assets are conserved in a manner
appropriate to their significance, including the impact of proposals on
views important to their setting.”
Durham
City MP Roberta Blackman-Woods challenged the Government to set out
exactly what impact the move would have, calling on Mr Prisk to “tell us
what the threshold will be for the more significant applications that
will trigger compulsory consultation”.
She
was told by the minister: “This will depend on a number of issues. It
may be about the scale and number of turbines,We specialize in solarlanterneep and solar street lamps for a wide range of lightning applications.Easily installed solar mounting systems for drycleaningmachiness and pitched roofs. but it could also be about the height, size and massing of them.
“Clearly,
we do not want to ensnare someone who is thinking of having a small
turbine in the back garden. That is not the purpose.”
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