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Local resistance to major solar farm proposals across England has intensified in March 2026, raising questions about the pace and siting of renewable deployment.
A planning inquiry has been set for 12 May into Exagen’s rejected Highfield Energy Park near Whittonstall, Northumberland — a 110-hectare scheme of more than 90,000 panels refused by the county council over visual impact and harm to two listed heritage assets.
In Norfolk, sculptor Antony Gormley and other residents have objected to Island Green Power’s 2,800‑acre Droves project, which would generate up to 500 megawatts (about 115,000 homes) and is being examined by the Planning Inspectorate after public comment.
In Wiltshire, villagers continue a three‑year campaign against ABEI Energy’s 24MW Whistlemead proposal on 64 acres, which developers say could power about 5,000 homes.
Developers argue the schemes deliver clean, domestic electricity, storage and grid stability; opponents cite landscape, heritage and community impacts.
The government retains final authority for very large projects, underscoring centralised planning decisions as friction grows between national net‑zero goals and local preservation concerns.
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Renewable energy - BBC News4 days agoBlocked solar farm plan to be appealedDeveloper Exagen says there is "urgent need" for renewable energy generation.4 days ago
Science & Environment | Latest News & Updates | BBC News18:41 GMTAntony Gormley dubs solar farm plan 'cruel',published at18:41 GMTAntony Gormley dubs solar farm plan 'cruel'







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