‘I don’t want an industrial site where cows used to be’: The farmers under threat from solar developers

‘i don’t want an industrial site where cows used to be’: the farmers under threat from solar developers

The trustees who oversee the land Robert and Emma Sturdy farm on are proposing to build a solar farm on nearly half their land - Lorne Campbell

“I’ve been here all my life.” Andrew Dakin is taking a break from his cattle on Kidsley Park Farm, 110 acres of rolling grassland on the outskirts of the pretty market town of Heanor between Derby and the Peak District. “It reminds me of me.”

His family have farmed on this flat, upland plane, surrounded by hills, for almost a century, filling in its old open cast mines and over the decades bringing the soil up to standard to support their herds of first dairy cows and now livestock raised for their beef. Bluff, down-to-earth and benign, at 65 Andrew is the third generation of Dakins to tend these pastures as a tenant farmer. It is so much a part of him, he admits, that he has never even wanted to go on holiday because it would take him away from where he feels rooted.

Yet an application has been submitted to local planners at Amber Valley Borough Council by the freeholder of the land to cover it with a solar farm. If approved, he faces being forced off.

Due to incentivised government targets to boost solar power generation fourfold before 2035 to clean up our energy supply in an age of climate change, developers of solar farms are currently offering landowners a very attractive deal. Rents offered per acre of land per year average £1,200, multiple times more than they are getting from their tenant farmers.

‘i don’t want an industrial site where cows used to be’: the farmers under threat from solar developers

Andrew Dakin is the third generation of his family to be a tenant farmer - Lorne Campbell/Guzelian

In such deals, it is usually the developers, not the landlords, who shoulder the bigger financial risk. That leaves tenants – roughly a third of all farmed land in England is tenanted – particularly vulnerable to the march of these photovoltaic panels.

‘I want to make sure this land is protected’ 

UK Solar Alliance, a support and information group for farmers in a similar situation to Dakin, says that its members have 70,000 acres of productive land facing a current threat of being turned over to solar. And speaking recently at the Hay Festival, Minette Batters, the former president of the National Farmers’ Union and herself a tenant farmer, made headlines by calling the spread of solar farms in the countryside as “horrifying”.

“The Conservatives certainly know how divisive this is because you saw Rishi Sunak and Liz Truss say in their 2022 leadership hustings, ‘We are going to stop solar on land and put it on rooftops’… [But] until we get a meaningful land-use framework that faces into this challenge, it will continue.”

Andrew Dakin prefers to use the word “swamped” to describe the fate of his fields if solar panels are installed. It’s not his own fate that upset him most, though. He has no children of his own to whom he would pass on Kidsley Park.

“I’m not going to be here forever but I want to make sure this land is protected for future generations because once it is gone, it is gone forever.”

He has a lifetime tenancy which should have made him secure, but a clause in his lease allows his landlord, a large local estate (which he prefers not to name because he still has to work with them) to take it back from him if they can get planning permission to change its use from agriculture. And that is what they are trying to do, working with Intelligent Alternatives, Glasgow-based developers whose stated aim is “new subsidy-free solar and battery storage scheme projects”.

‘i don’t want an industrial site where cows used to be’: the farmers under threat from solar developers

Andrew Dakins' grandfather Jack Dakin on the farm in the 1950s with a Shire horse - Lorne Campbell/Guzelian

Dakin had anticipated that the planning application would have been submitted already, but reports in recent months suggest there’s been a lull, which may just be a reaction to widespread local opposition. Over 1,000 people in Heanor, and in Smalley, the next village along the road from the farm, have signed a petition.

Earlier this month, Dakin was invited to take four of his calves in his cattle truck, festooned with banners opposing the solar farm, to the annual agricultural and horticultural show in Heanor, its first gathering since Covid. “Local people don’t want this and they don’t want it for their children.”

He has a visit to Heanor’s primary school coming up before the end of term to talk to the pupils about his fight to stay on his land. “There is all the uncertainty, but I’m carrying on.”

He has been reassured that he will be able to stay on in the farmhouse if the solar farm is built, but for him that just adds insult to injury. “I care for my elderly mother who lives with me and has dementia, but I’m not ready to retire and live here in the middle of an industrial site where cows used to be.”

According to George Dunn, the Tenant Farmers Association’s chief executive, his members are facing an “escalating threat” in the rush to solar. “The number of tenant farmers who are being targeted has increased. We have members calling almost on a weekly basis to say that they have found out that there is a solar scheme being planned on their land.”

‘i don’t want an industrial site where cows used to be’: the farmers under threat from solar developers

Robert and Emma Sturdy worry about Britain's food security - Lorne Campbell

That was the experience in October 2020 of Robert and Emma Sturdy and their two young children, tenants at Eden Farm in Old Malton, North Yorkshire, in the family since 1954. A few miles from the beautiful Howardian Hills, the area is predominantly agricultural, home to thousands of acres of good farmland which is used for combinable crops – beans, cereal, oil seed rape – all which contribute towards food production.

“We were made aware that our freeholder, the Fitzwilliam Trust Corporation Ltd, was planning a solar development on our farm,” recalls 45-year-old Emma, “but it took until the next month for the land agent to come to see us in person and lay out a map on our kitchen table.”

It showed 130 acres of decent growing land at the heart of Eden Farm’s total of 280, was going to be used for 90,000 solar panels. “We weren’t being consulted, we were being told. Honestly, I nearly fell off my chair and Rob was in shock by the look on his face,” Emma adds.

‘It hangs over every decision we take’

Unlike Andrew Dakin, Emma is happy both to name and to talk about their freeholders. She insists that they have always had a good relationship with them, but feels that in the present very public stand-off, the Fitzwilliam Trust is nervous of bad publicity and so is hiding behind Harmony Energy, the solar farm developers they have signed up with. After three years of campaigning and sleepless nights about their future, a planning decision was reached last October. The Sturdys thought their nightmare was over, when the planners sided with them and rejected the development.

Now, however, the deep-pocketed freeholders and Harmony Energy have lodged an appeal that will not be decided until the end of September, so the limbo goes on. “It is without doubt the most difficult time we have ever been through. It is with us every minute of every day. It hangs over every decision we take about investing in the farming business. And it hangs over our home, our stability, our future.”

‘i don’t want an industrial site where cows used to be’: the farmers under threat from solar developers

Robert's late father, John, who farmed the land before his son - Lorne Campbell

Not one to be pushed about, Emma Sturdy has been lobbying Parliament and is one of the founders of Solar Alliance. Like Dakin, she is not against solar and, she adds, she is absolutely not a Nimby. The problem is not a solar farm in her backyard, she explains, it is that prime land that grows crops desperately needed to improve Britain’s food security is going to be lost. She estimates that on her farm alone the solar panels will remove a million loaves of bread from the food chain.

In May of this year, Claire Coutinho, the Energy and Climate Change Secretary of State, appeared to offer a solution, namely that “the best agricultural land [known as BMV, best and most versatile] must be protected for food production”. She promised – as Emma Sturdy has been demanding – to produce regulations on where solar panels could and couldn’t be placed.

For its part, the National Farmers’ Union has a clear position on this. The current president Tom Bradshaw insists that a balance has to be struck between food security and climate ambitions.

“Planning guidance states that, wherever possible, large-scale solar farm development should be located on lower-quality agricultural land, avoiding the most productive and versatile soils. Utilising roofs and farm buildings for solar should also be incentivised as it delivers a sustainable method of energy production while avoiding any land-use conflict.”

Sturdy would happily sign up to that, and remains hopeful that the pending planning appeal will heed such guidance. Yet, since the 130 acres affected are grade one and two prime growing fields, it is hard to understand why they have been targeted by the developers in the first place. The answer, suggests Sturdy, is that what developers want is land close to electricity sub-stations, like her fields, where the cost of feeding into the grid is low.

‘This is our home’

Emma notes: “It doesn’t matter to them whether it is prime or poor quality land. They want the maximum financial return, so a site that will involve as few cables, tunnelling and going under roads as possible to get a connection. The further the distance between the fields and the sub-station, the more likely it is to involve negotiating with several landlords for one project.”

‘i don’t want an industrial site where cows used to be’: the farmers under threat from solar developers

Emma Sturdy continues to fight for tenant farmers in the same situation - Lorne Campbell/Guzelian

Andrew Dakin – whose farm’s heavy clay soil is, he believes, mostly grade 3 (of 5) - sees it in simpler, moral terms. “Because we are playing catch-up on renewable energy, the developers want quick and easy fixes like building on good farmland. Greed is what this is all about, a younger generation of land agents who want to get rich quick rather than work hard.”

Back at Eden Farm, Emma Sturdy is trying not to get gloomy. “Some days over the past almost four years, I have thought, why don’t we just walk away? But then my husband is a brilliant, hard-working farmer and, even with the statutory compensation we would be entitled to, the chances of us ever being able to afford to buy our own farm one day are remote. With land prices now, farms are beyond the reach of ordinary people like us.”

And so she continues the fight for her family and for all tenant farmers in the same unenviable situation. “This is our home. My husband’s family have invested 70 years into the place. There is still time for the developers and the landowner – with whom we have always had a good relationship – to sit down with us for a genuine consultation to see if there is another way of generating solar power here alongside running a farm that produces the food that will give this country better food security.”

Sign up to the Front Page newsletter for free: Your essential guide to the day's agenda from The Telegraph - direct to your inbox seven days a week.

OTHER NEWS

17 minutes ago

‘They are milking you!’: Texas woman is supporting three siblings and her unemployed mother on a $2,500 monthly income. Caleb Hammer says she’s being 'manipulated'

17 minutes ago

The Supreme Court’s disastrous Trump immunity decision, explained

17 minutes ago

Joe Rogan Pushes Back Against Terrence Howard During Podcast

17 minutes ago

Breeze Airways Is Giving Away a Free Year of Travel — How to Enter

17 minutes ago

UFL star kicker Jake Bates explains why he signed with Detroit Lions

17 minutes ago

Manchester United 'accelerate Joshua Zirkzee bid' after £12m compromise for Dan Ashworth's first transfer deal

17 minutes ago

Investors just got an inflation wakeup call. Will they answer?

17 minutes ago

Eamonn Holmes forced to leave GB News show over ill health

17 minutes ago

Manuel Ugarte faces having dream Man Utd shirt number taken away by Erik ten Hag

17 minutes ago

Philadelphia 76ers Starting Lineup Looks Unbeatable After Signing Paul George

17 minutes ago

Bologna chief delivers Riccardo Calafiori transfer update with major blow to Arsenal rivals

17 minutes ago

Manitoba premier polling high after nine months, but experts say challenges lie ahead

17 minutes ago

‘My £800k Sipp is underperforming – should I drop it?’

17 minutes ago

Murray out of Wimbledon singles as Djokovic makes bow

17 minutes ago

Steelers cornerback ranks top-5 among CBs in man coverage for 2023

17 minutes ago

'Even the strongest people have their bad days' - Ronaldo

17 minutes ago

Could Buccaneers Sign J.C. Jackson?

17 minutes ago

The $5 Target Kitchen Find I Only Wish I Had Bought Sooner

17 minutes ago

Injured XV: The most ‘unlucky’ player, a ‘superstar’ All Black and several Rugby World Cup winners

17 minutes ago

Marcus Rashford: Two key factors block remarkable Man Utd exit as forward makes stance known

17 minutes ago

Trump Media announces $105 million raised from DJT warrants

17 minutes ago

England are no longer Euro 2024 favourites! Opta supercomputer predicts the Three Lions WON'T win in Germany after their recent struggles - so, who is backed to be champions?

17 minutes ago

Video: England's WAG arrive on SIX private jets: Dani Dyer, Megan Pickford, Aine May Kennedy and Lauren Fryer touch down at Erfurt-Weimar Airport as they head to Three Lions training base to spend day with the players before quarter final

17 minutes ago

Video: Gregg Berhalter gives blunt answer about his USMNT future amid calls for coach to be fired after disastrous Copa America group-stage exit

17 minutes ago

Video: Shocking moment Ecuador and Mexico fans brawl in the stands as brutal punches are thrown during Copa America clash

20 minutes ago

Open thread: Where would you currently rank the Lions among all NFL teams?

20 minutes ago

What to know about presidential immunity after the Supreme Court ruling

22 minutes ago

When is the Democratic National Convention?

22 minutes ago

Viral video shows three children being rescued from hot car where their mother left them to go shopping

22 minutes ago

Houston PD investigation into suspended sexual assault cases not completed by mayor’s July 1st goal

22 minutes ago

Chelsea sign Leicester midfielder Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall for around £30million

22 minutes ago

Marketa Vondrousova joins Steffi Graf in unwanted piece of Wimbledon history

22 minutes ago

Child serial killer Lucy Letby guilty of attempting to murder premature baby

22 minutes ago

A gardeners guide to growing your own tea

22 minutes ago

Malaysia leads 35 countries in percentage of people with favourable view on Russia: Pew survey

22 minutes ago

29 people nabbed for their alleged involvement in various scams

22 minutes ago

France’s moderate voters face extreme choices in run-off vote

22 minutes ago

Taylor Swift Has Something to Say About Simone Biles Using Her Music for Floor Routine

22 minutes ago

Tiger shark spotted off of Hawaiian coast prompts warning signs on beach

22 minutes ago

‘This isn’t a culture war’: the UK women who feel politically homeless