Wind turbines for Portsmouth?

Plans to install more than two dozen wind turbines at Portsmouth’s port are still being considered by the city council

Author: Josh Wright, LDRSPublished 22nd Dec 2021

The scheme proposes the construction of 25 ‘small scale’ turbines across the port site as part of efforts to make it the first zero carbon port in the country. Originally nine larger ones had been considered.

Speaking in 2019, Portsmouth International Port director, Mike Sellers, said the project would bring ‘significant’ benefits to the city as a whole and could inspire similar work at ports across the country.

A planning application was submitted in April 2020 for the 15m structures which it said was more likely to be approved.

‘The application is to erect up to 25 small and quiet vertical wind turbines that will be set a maximum height to achieve planning consent where taller proposed wind turbines have failed,’ it said.

‘The wind turbines will be set at such a height as can be obtained within the constraints of planning permissions.’

The council originally set a target of reaching a decision in September 2020 but it said a lack of information had been submitted with the plans, delaying progress.

‘While the agent for the development, originally approached the council in April 2020 with some initial information for the stationing of wind turbines at the port, there were significant gaps with the information provided as well as some inconsistency within the application,’ a spokesman for the council said. ‘In November 2020 one of the applications made at that time was withdrawn.

‘Councils officers worked with the agent and advised and supported them to make a valid application with sufficient information in June of this year.

‘The public consultation period for this proposal, at the instigation of the applicant, ran from early August, to the end of September.

‘While there are still some elements of the application that require additional work, the council is assessing the proposal following the completion of public consultation in October.’

City council leader Gerald Vernon-Jackson said delays in reaching a decision had been exacerbated by government policies that discouraged the installation of onshore wind power.

Last year Cllr Vernon-Jackson requested that the turbine scheme be considered by the council’s planning committee before a decision is made.

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