Funding for giant Berkshire solar farm approved

Wokingham Borough Council approves more than £20 million for project at Barkham

Author: James Aldridge - Local democracy reporterPublished 3rd Aug 2021
Last updated 3rd Aug 2021

The funding for a multi-million pound solar project in Wokingham has been approved.

More than £20 million will be spent on a new solar farm in Barkham which will see approximately 72,000 solar panels installed on the land.

In total, £20,283,000 will be spent on the solar farm, which will be funded through borrowing.

The scheme has proven controversial, as it involves evicting cattle farmer Andrew Lake, who rents it as agricultural land from Wokingham Borough Council.

He criticised the plan for swallowing up valuable farm land and warned that the land would be lost forever once the solar farm has completed its ‘lifecycle’. The council has said that the land will be returned to agricultural use after 25 years.

His fears were echoed by Liberal Democrat Councillor Sarah Kerr (Evendons), who expressed concern that the farm could be reclassified as a brownfield site once the ‘lifecycle’ ends.

During the meeting, Cllr Kerr asked: “There is a risk that at the end of use as a solar farm, after 25 years, this site may not be restored to the prime agricultural land it currently is, and I’m concerned about the risk of a change of use.

“There is a possibility that it could be classified as a brownfield site, which means houses, what is this local authority doing to mitigate against this risk of a change of use, after the solar farm is gone?”

Cllr Gregor Murray, executive member for emissions (CON, Norreys) answered: “It’s a really interesting point that you raise Sarah, yes there is the potential risk of that it might classified as a brownfield site at the end of its use. But my understanding of planning guidance and the regulations in relation to this is that we won’t be the authority that determines whether it not it will become a brownfield site, it will come down to national planning guidance, that would determine that, not us as a borough."

Benefits

He went on to proclaim the benefits he saw in the scheme, which he said would reduce the carbon footprint of the borough by approximately one per cent or the equivalent of the council’s annual energy use.

He also highlighted the tree planting element of the scheme, which would involve planting roughly 18,000 trees, and the measures included to protect hedgerows and footpaths around the site.

It is hoped that the solar farm will generate half a million pounds for the council year, after running costs and servicing the debt are factored in. Cllr Murray then said that money can be reinvested into the council’s other climate emergency initiatives, some of which will come at a net cost to the community.

Spending for the massive project was approved unanimously by Wokingham Borough Council’s executive committee.

All of the executive committee are Conservatives.

The fate of the scheme now rests on it being approved by the borough’s planning committee.

The plan for the solar farm was submitted in March and it is due to be decided this September.

You can observe the plan for the solar farm by putting reference 211081 into the council’s planning portal: https://planning.wokingham.gov.uk/FastWebPL/welcome.asp

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