The Rt. Hon David Cameron MP
The Prime Minister
10 Downing Street
LONDON, SW1A 2AA
30th January 2012
Dear Prime Minister,
As Members of Parliament from across the political spectrum, we have grown more and more concerned about the Government’s policy of support for on-shore wind energy production.
In these financially straightened times, we think it is unwise to make consumers pay, through taxpayer subsidy, for inefficient and intermittent energy production that typifies on-shore wind turbines.
In the on-going review of subsidy for renewable energy subsidies, we ask the Government to dramatically cut the subsidy for on-shore wind and spread the savings made between other types of reliable renewable energy production and energy efficiency measures.
We also are worried that the new National Planning Policy Framework, in its current form, diminishes the chances of local people defeating unwanted on-shore wind farm proposals through the planning system. Thus we attach some subtle amendments to the existing wording that we believe will help rebalance the system.
Finally, recent planning appeals have approved wind farm developments with the inspectors citing renewable energy targets as being more important than planning considerations. Taken to its logical conclusion, this means that it is impossible to defeat applications through the planning system. We would urge you to ensure that planning inspectors know that the views of local people and long established planning requirements should always be taken into account.
Yours sincerely,
Chris Heaton-Harris
Tony Cunningham
Philip Hollobone
Christopher Pincher
Christopher Chope
James Clappison
Nadine Dorries
Dan Byles
Sammy Wilson
Karen Bradley
Edward Leigh
David Tredinnick
S.J. Baker
Richard Harrington
Roger Williams
David Davis
Jacob Rees-Mogg
Nicholas Soames
Matthew Hancock
Guto Bebb
Richard Bacon
Kris Hopkins
David Nuttall
Iain Stewart
Bernard Jenkin
Mark Spencer
Dr. Daniel Poulter
John Stevenson
Anne Main
Bill Cash
David Mowat
Andrew Griffiths
Karen Lumley
Simon Harris
Nadhim Zahawi
Peter Bone
Natascha Engel
Charlie Elphicke
Pauline Latham
Justin Tomlinson
Sarah Newton
Mark Pawsey
Geoffrey Cox
Stuart Andrew
Brandon Lewis
Marcus Jones
Adam Holloway
Alun Cairns
Damian Collins
Richard Drax
David Morris
Martin Vickers
Graham Brady
Craig Whittaker
Louise Mensch
Bob Stewart
Robert Walter
Adam Afriyie
Aidan Burley
Jack Lopresti
Bob Blackman
James Wharton
Nick De Bois
Julian Sturdy
Steve Brine
Heather Wheeler
Robert Syms
Nigel Mills
Caroline Nokes
Simon Reevell
Brian Binley
Mark Reckless
Steven Barclay
Paul Maynard
Julian Lewis
Jeremy Lefroy
Lorraine Fullbrook
Jackie Doyle-Price
Graham Evans
James Gray
Douglas Carswell
Mark Williams
Patrick Mercer
Andrew Rosindell
Rory Stewart
Oliver Heald
John Glen
Andrea Leadsom
Mark Pritchard
Ian Liddell-Grainger
Caroline Dinenage
Charles Walker
Neil Parish
Andrew Percy
Stephen McPartland
Andrew Bridgen
Greg Knight
Andrew Turner
David Ruffley
Mark Garnier
Tracey Crouch
Andrew Bingham
Priti Patel
Stewart Jackson
Karl McCartney
Philip Davies
Appendix 1: Suggested amendments to paragraphs 152 and 153 of the NPPF
152. To help increase the use and supply of renewable and low-carbon energy, local planning authorities should recognise the responsibility on all communities to contribute to energy generation from renewable or low-carbon sources. They should:
• have a positive strategy to promote energy from renewable and low-carbon sources, including deep geothermal energy;
• design their policies to maximise renewable and low-carbon energy development while ensuring that adverse impacts are addressed satisfactorily;
• identify suitable areas for renewable and low-carbon energy sources, and supporting infrastructure, where this would help secure the development of such sources and achieve an appropriate balance between environmental, social and economic objectives, including in particular the contribution of the rural landscape and heritage assets to economic development - See Footnote;
• support community-led initiatives for renewable and low carbon energy, including developments outside such areas being taken forward through neighbourhood planning; and
• identify opportunities where development can draw its energy supply from decentralised, renewable or low carbon energy supply systems and for co-locating potential heat customers and suppliers.
153. When determining planning applications, local planning authorities should apply the presumption in favour of sustainable development and in doing so should take full account of the requirements set out in paragraph 152 and the footnote and:
• not require applicants for energy development to demonstrate the overall need for renewable or low-carbon energy, recognising that overall compliance with national EU obligations as a whole is not a material consideration in relation to the acceptability of specific locations, and also recognise that even small-scale projects provide a valuable contribution to cutting greenhouse gas emissions;
• approve the application if its impacts are (or can be made) acceptable. Once opportunity areas for renewable and low-carbon energy have been mapped in plans, local planning authorities should also expect subsequent applications for commercial scale projects outside these areas to demonstrate compelling reasons why development should take place outside such areas; and
• identify and weigh all the separate forms of harm to other interests of acknowledged importance that would be likely to arise, including significant heritage assets, and ensure that development would provide wider benefits that would clearly outweigh the sum total of all the harm identified.
Footnote: In assessing the likely impacts of potential wind energy development in broad areas, and in determining planning applications for such development, including all non-domestic schemes irrespective of their scale, planning authorities should follow the approach set out in the National Policy Statement for Renewable Energy Infrastructure (read with the relevant sections of the Overarching National Policy Statement for Energy Infrastructure, including that on aviation impacts). Where plans identify areas as suitable for renewable and low-carbon energy development, they should make clear what criteria have determined their selection, including for what size of development the areas are considered suitable.