England’s biggest onshore wind farm could be built in Greater Manchester after a clean energy company announced plans to put up 21 turbines.
The site to the north of Manchester could create enough electricity to power 100,000 homes before the end of the decade.
Cubico, the company behind the project, said it plans to invest £200 million to get the wind farm up and running by 2030.
It would be England’s first major onshore wind development in years after a de facto ban was reversed by Labour earlier this year.
The previous rules, put in place in 2015 by the Conservatives, meant onshore wind was treated differently from other developments, with schemes stopped from going ahead if there were any objections.
The scheme will go out to the public for consultation this month before eventually being put in front of local planning authorities.
Labour has said it wants to decarbonise the UK’s power system by 2030, in plans which were described as a “huge challenge” but “achievable” by the grid operator on Tuesday.
The target would involve doubling onshore wind capacity, tripling solar energy and quadrupling offshore wind capacity from where it is now.
The development at Scout Moor would be a boost to the Government’s hopes of hitting the goal, adding about 100 megawatts to the UK’s clean energy capacity.
It would be the fifth largest onshore wind farm in the UK, with the other four being in Scotland.
But while Scotland generally has better conditions for wind power generation, constraints relating to the grid mean projects often cannot deliver power to sites in England.
The developer’s CEO, David Swindin, said the plan “reflects our strong confidence in the UK renewables sector and Britain’s potential to become a global clean energy powerhouse”.
“We’re encouraged by the Government’s vision to accelerate the build-out of renewable energy infrastructure across the country, and we are committed to delivering projects that decarbonise our power system, enhance energy security, and benefit local communities.”
Cubico is one of the world’s largest privately owned renewable energy developers, and is backed by the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan and PSP Investments, one of the largest investment managers in Canada.
Separately, the Welsh government gave planning permission for a 92-megawatt wind farm near Caerphilly on Tuesday.
The scheme, called Twyn Hywel, has 14 wind turbines, and is set to be finished in 2027.
The developer, Bute Energy, has 16 wind projects across Wales in the works – this is the first.
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