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PRIVACY
Opinion

Pylons are the new battleground as governments push on towards net zero

There has been vocal opposition to wind turbine and pylon proposals right across the country

Electricity pylons on Conwy Valley(Image: Daily Post Wales)

Earlier this month, an independent report commissioned by the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government made the case for households living in the path of new electricity pylons to be given cash payments, as part of a series of initiatives to speed up the planning process and deliver projects faster.

The report also supported the use of “community payments” for areas where new, visible infrastructure, such as substations, are built, which could be used to pay for local programmes, such as energy efficiency schemes or electric vehicle charging points.

The report’s author, the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s first Electricity Networks Commissioner, Nick Winser, was unequivocal that the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s efforts to hit net zero targets were being held back by the pace of new grid connections, an essential piece of the energy infrastructure jigsaw, as new wind and solar farms, as well as new nuclear stations, start coming online.

The queue for a º£½ÇÊÓÆµ grid connection is already the longest in Europe, while National Grid has warned that five times more power lines need to be built in the next seven years, than in the last 30, if we are to support a transition to greener energy.

The report has been a year in the making and the government has broadly welcomed its recommendations, having previously stated an objective of “halving” the 12-14 years it currently takes to build new power lines.

Support has also come from industry, with the Energy Networks Association, the industry body representing the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s energy network operators, describing it as a “major intervention” from the commissioner that takes a long-term view of the whole energy system. The response from the National Infrastructure Commission was similarly positive, welcoming “a single version of the truth” on future network capacity and citing the need for “transformational change” in our electricity network.

Introducing reforms that make it easier to consent new overhead power lines isn’t universally welcomed, however. Much has been made in the media of high-profile MPs, including º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Environment Secretary, Therese Coffey and former Home Secretary, Dame Priti Patel, opposing plans for new lines within their own constituencies, while campaign groups have criticised the use of community payments as “paying off” communities with nominal sums, rather than investing in the right projects in the right locations.

Looking at the picture here in Wales, the debate often feels even more heated. As the Welsh Government pushes on towards its target of 100% of our electricity being delivered by renewable sources by 2035, there has been vocal opposition to wind turbine and pylon proposals right across the country, with visible protests at this year’s Eisteddfod and Royal Welsh Show.