Villages Overruled as Miliband Pushes Through Monster Solar Scheme

CP

Energy Secretary Ed Miliband has once again ridden roughshod over rural Britain, forcing through the country’s largest solar farm while locals warn their countryside is being sacrificed on the altar of his green crusade.

The Springwell Solar Farm in Lincolnshire will sprawl across vast swathes of agricultural land, producing up to 800 megawatts of electricity. Ministers boast it could power 180,000 homes, but for those living nearby it represents something far more bleak, the steady industrialisation of England’s heartland.

Covering seven square miles, an area dwarfing Hyde Park ten times over, the development will blanket productive farmland in panels and fencing, fundamentally altering the character of at least ten villages.

Residents have reacted with fury, describing the scheme in apocalyptic terms. Marc Williams, of the Springwell Solar Farm Action Group, said: “The community are so concerned about this … Everyone’s against it, apart from those who will profit.

“We wouldn’t object to plans for a couple of hundred acres but this is vast. It will be an industrialised complex like Chernobyl.

“People will go for a drive and see nothing but panels.”

Such warnings are not isolated. Across Lincolnshire, critics say the sheer scale of solar expansion is leaving what one councillor described as “an enormous scar” on the countryside, with fears that farmland is being swallowed up at an alarming rate.

Miliband’s approval is the latest in a surge of decisions that have provoked a mounting rural backlash. Campaigners argue the Government’s policy is turning productive land into what they see as industrial energy zones, with one farming group warning of the “destruction of countryside and best farmland” as solar projects spread.

The project, backed by EDF and Luminous Energy, is the 25th major solar farm approved since 2024 under Labour’s planning regime. That system allows ministers to overrule local objections whenever schemes are labelled “nationally significant”, a designation critics say Miliband hands out with abandon.

Indeed, opponents accuse the Energy Secretary of treating local consultation with thinly veiled disdain. Some local politicians have complained he had “made up his mind already”, reinforcing the perception that decisions are stitched up long before residents get a say.

The anger is sharpened by Labour’s scrapping of planning protections that once limited solar development on food producing land. In a county often described as the breadbasket of Britain, many see the loss of prime farmland as reckless at best, and ideological at worst.

Even those not opposed to renewable energy question why such schemes are not being directed towards rooftops, warehouses or brownfield sites instead. Critics argue there is ample “wasted space” available without carpeting fields in glass and steel.

Yet Miliband has shown little appetite for compromise. He has aggressively reclassified large scale solar and wind farms as projects that should be approved by default, effectively sidelining local democracy in favour of central diktat.

Ministers insist the push is necessary. Energy minister Michael Shanks said: “We are driving further and faster for clean home-grown power that we control to protect the British people and bring down bills for good.

“It is crucial we learn the lessons of the conflict in the Middle East – solar is one of the cheapest forms of power available and is how we get off the roller-coaster of international fossil fuel markets and secure our own energy independence.”

But for many, such claims do little to soften the reality on the ground, where centuries old landscapes are being transformed into what critics describe as sprawling industrial complexes.

Miliband’s wider ambitions only deepen those fears. He is driving a radical overhaul of Britain’s energy system, aiming for 95 per cent clean electricity by 2030, a target that requires a dramatic expansion of solar and wind infrastructure in just a few short years.

In Lincolnshire, that ambition is already colliding with reality. Residents say they feel “dumped on” and ignored, as wave after wave of large scale projects are approved in their area, more than anywhere else in the country.

The language from the top has done little to calm tensions. Prime Minister Keir Starmer has vowed to “bulldoze the blockers”, while Miliband himself has pledged to take on the “blockers, the delayers, the obstructionists”.

For critics, the message is unmistakable, opposition will be crushed, not considered.

And so, as yet another vast solar installation is forced through, many in rural England are left with the same bitter conclusion, that under Miliband’s relentless green agenda, their countryside is no longer something to be protected, but something to be used.


This article (Villages Overruled as Miliband Pushes Through Monster Solar Scheme) was created and published by Conservative Post and is republished here under “Fair Use” with attribution to the author CP
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1 Comment on Villages Overruled as Miliband Pushes Through Monster Solar Scheme

  1. 2020 World Bank Study of Photovoltaic Power Potential (sunshine). UK ranks second from the bottom in the world. Miliband is quite mad and/or ignorant of science.

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