Planning revolution to make Britain energy secure
Dozens of clean energy projects, including wind and solar power,
will jump to the front of the queue for grid connections, as
the government paves the way for a new era of clean electricity
through the Plan for Change to achieve clean power by 2030.
The landmark Planning and Infrastructure Bill
will be formally introduced to Parliament this week, laying the
groundwork for a new approach to prioritise new transmission
infrastructure, which will unlock...Request free trial
Dozens of clean energy projects, including wind and solar power, will jump to the front of the queue for grid connections, as the government paves the way for a new era of clean electricity through the Plan for Change to achieve clean power by 2030. The landmark Planning and Infrastructure Bill will be formally introduced to Parliament this week, laying the groundwork for a new approach to prioritise new transmission infrastructure, which will unlock growth with £200 billion of investment and protect households from the rollercoaster of fossil fuel markets. Ready-to-go projects from solar farms to new factories currently face lengthy connection waits of up to 10 years due an out of date connections process, creating uncertainty for communities and businesses, costing the taxpayer millions of pounds, and weakening the country's energy security. The flawed ‘first come, first served' process is preventing viable infrastructure from being able to connect ahead of speculative projects clogging up the queue, and will be replaced by a ‘first ready, first connected' system that prioritises the right homegrown clean power projects for quicker connections to build an energy system that can bring down bills for good. For decades, developers, energy companies and businesses have been inundated with lengthy processes and planning delays that have acted as a barrier to growth, and the forthcoming Bill will set out how the delivery process for critical infrastructure will be streamlined. Decisions for onshore and offshore wind, solar power, electricity grids, hydrogen, carbon capture and nuclear power stations will be fast-tracked to accelerate growth, creating thousands of new jobs, adding billions to the UK economy, and delivering more clean energy for people to heat and power their homes. These changes will not only rollback planning delays to get Britain building but also deliver a more prosperous and energy secure for the next generation, as part of the government's Plan for Change to boost growth and living standards in every region across the country and put more money back into people's pockets.
Deputy Prime Minister and Housing Secretary Angela Rayner said:
“Through our landmark Planning and Infrastructure Bill we're taking bold action to fix the broken planning system, paving the way for us to get Britain building more vital infrastructure so our children and grandchildren can grow up in a more energy secure world.
“This is just one of many steps we're taking to deliver our Plan
for Change for working people and families with a decade of
national renewal, unleashing growth to boost living standards,
slash everyday costs and increase prosperity for all.”
“The only way to get Britain off dependency on fossil fuel markets controlled by dictators is with clean homegrown power that we control. “By taking on a broken planning system that puts the breaks on growth, this Government is driving forward with our clean energy superpower mission and Plan for change Every turbine, every solar panel, every cable we connect helps protect families and paves the way for a new era of clean energy for our country.
This will support the government's pledge to make planning decisions on at least 150 major infrastructure projects, including wind, solar, and hydrogen, in this Parliament – almost tripling the 57 decisions made in the previous Parliament and more than 130 made since 2011. The government has already agreed 10 so far, including several energy projects such as six solar farms, amounting to nearly 3 gigawatts of new clean energy for the country. A series of targeted reforms to accelerate growth and speed up the government's Clean Power 2030 Action Plan will be brought forward in the Planning and Infrastructure Bill. These include:
Further changes will also be confirmed to the excessive rules around attempts to block major infrastructure through the courts with more unarguable cases thrown out, so nuclear plants and wind farms can be approved and built faster. This is on top of streamlining environment assessments to save developers time and money while boosting nature recovery and wildlife. Note to editors:
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