By Local Democracy Reporter Peter Davison
Controversial proposals to cover an area of land near Melksham the size of 24 football pitches with solar panels will be heard by a planning inspector after Wiltshire Council turned them down.
The proposal, put forward by Blue Stone Renewables I Ltd, involves the installation of more than 31,000 solar panels, each standing at 2.7 metres tall.
The solar and battery storage facility would cover 17 hectares on a site totalling 26 hectares at Whistle Mead in Chalfield, near Melksham.
The site is located about 180 metres from the nearest house and under a mile from the National Trust’s Grade I listed Great Chalfield Manor.
The matter was debated by members of Wiltshire Council’s strategic planning committee back in April.
Wiltshire Council’s planning department recommended councillors grant planning permission.
But against the wishes of their officers, the committee voted to refuse the application based on the size of the proposed scheme and the “cumulative impact of multiple solar farms.”
During a three-hour debate, councillors heard and raised arguments against the proposal on grounds as varied as the impact on the landscape, the fire risk posed by 20 battery storage facilities (BESS), how fire engines would get to the site on lanes not wide enough for two cars to pass and the risk of contaminated water from any potential fire-fighting effort getting into the aquifer below the site.
Wiltshire Council ward member Andrew Griffin (Melksham Without West & Rural, Liberal Democrat) expressed concerns about the cumulative effect of solar farms in the area which, he said, “equate to about three times the total residential area.”
And Cllr Nick Holder (Bowerhill, Conservative) added, “Were this application to be approved, we would have over 600 acres of solar within five kilometres of this site.
“Forty per cent of Wiltshire’s solar capacity is on just two per cent of its land area. I just don’t think (the planning officers have) addressed the cumulative impact.”
Applicant ABEI Energy said the scheme would provide 24 megawatts of clean, renewable energy to the local grid – enough to power approximately 5,000 homes.
The company told the planning inspector that it had liaised with the council prior to the planning application being submitted.
It said there were no good reasons for refusal and that solar schemes were vital in helping the UK achieve its Net Zero goals.
A two-day planning hearing is scheduled to be held on 22nd and 23rd September, at a venue to be confirmed.
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