Tinbum wrote: ↑Sun Jul 14, 2024 10:36 am
Mart wrote: ↑Sun Jul 14, 2024 7:55 am
Also worth remembering the statistic that the equivalent of the UK's whole leccy demand could be met from PV installed just on 2% of England's land. Currently about 2% of the land is covered in golf courses and golf related sites. So if for instance, we eventually reach a stage where 10% of our leccy comes from PV farms, then that's 0.2% of England, or 10% of golf courses!
So in reality, the amount of land needed/used for PV farms is tiny, the land used is lower quality, and it can typically still be used for grazing, so there is no significant impact on UK food production.
It's not just low grade land though!
Round here they have a proposal for 3000+ acres and a lot is on land that is productive, it's pretty well all arable now. I can't see it being used for grazing. It's also the scale, turning countryside into an industrial area.
The argument about golf courses is just rubbish. In the majority of cases we already have the golf courses. If we had to be self sufficient in an emergency it would be easy to farm them!!
Hi, I mentioned the golf courses for scale. Just to show that there isn't a shortage of farmland, especially this low grade arable/grazing land. If there are genuine concerns about crop production then a tiny reduction in golf related land, or beef production would more than make up for it. If the actual farmland/grazing land needed is a tiny fraction of that golf figure, say 10% or less(?) then how can the PV be a problem/concern.
Also, I didn't say it was all low grade land, I actually said the vast majority. I believe the figure for PV farms is ~80% on 3b or lower grade land. And there are restrictions on 3a and higher.
The impact on UK crop production from PV farms will be somewhere between zero and negligible, it's simply not a real issue, but at the same time, I fully appreciate that many people are genuinely concerned, which I believe is down to misinformation and anti-RE FUD.
I'm sorry if this seems rude or argumentative, but there really is no issue regarding solar farms and crop production losses*. But there is a need to expand RE generation and the mix as quickly as possible.
Lastly you suggest turning countryside into an industrial area, but we weren't talking about the countryside, we were talking about low grade agricultural land, and farming is an industry. There are of course strong arguments for some of this low grade land to be returned to nature, especially woodland/forestry, and PV farms whilst not on anything like that scale, do dramatically increase the amount of wild flowers and pollinators.
*Yes it is entirely sensible to have concerns over loss of crop production, but when the issue is analysed and the scale is taken into account, those fears should dissipate almost entirely.