Renewable energy increasing in Aylesbury Vale
The amount produced in the area has risen by 41% since 2014
Hundreds of gigawatts per hour of renewable energy were produced in Aylesbury Vale last year.
Figures show the amount of renewable energy created last year in Aylesbury Vale was 41% higher than the earliest year of data available.
236,975 megawatts per hour (around 237 gigawatts) of renewable electricity were generated in Aylesbury Vale in 2019, compared to 168 GWh produced in 2014.
The biggest producer of energy in Aylesbury Vale last year was landfill gas, which is created by the decomposition of organic materials in a landfill, which generated 104,741 MWh – 44% of the total.
This was followed by solar power (43%), and anaerobic digestion, which is the breakdown of organic material by micro-organisms to produce biogas – which generated a further 25,938MWh (11%).
Renewable electricity generated around a third of the UK's total energy last year (120,675 GWh) – almost double the amount it did in 2014.
Offshore wind farms, which are turbines located at sea, and onshore wind farms, based on land, were each responsible for 27% of the UK's total, but the Government's plan focuses largely on those in the water.
Downing Street said the £160 million investment programme will enable the sector to support up to 60,000 jobs by 2030, upping the target for offshore wind from 30 to 40 gigawatts.
Speaking at the Conservative Party Conference, Mr Johnson said: “Your kettle, your washing machine, your cooker, your heating, your plug-in electric vehicle – the whole lot of them will get their juice cleanly and without guilt from the breezes that blow around these islands.
“As Saudi Arabia is to oil, the UK is to wind – a place of almost limitless resource, but in the case of wind without the carbon emissions and without the damage to the environment."
Behind wind farms (54%) and plant biomass facilities (21%), solar panels were the fourth biggest generator of renewable energy in the UK last year – with 11%.
Photovoltaic technology, as its known, also has great support from the public, with the Government's own polls showing 86% of people support solar – the most popular form of renewable energy.
Chris Hewett, chief executive of the Solar Trade Association, said:
“It is encouraging that the Prime Minister is embracing renewables, but this must not be limited to large bits of kit.
"Solar energy was noticeably absent from yesterday’s speech, when it has a significant role to play in supporting a green recovery and shifting the UK towards a low-carbon economy.
"Today, solar technologies power more than a million homes and are vital in delivering flexible, affordable electricity and thousands of quality jobs across the country."