Search

Solar

Monday
15 Jan 2024

50MW Solar Farm Approved on Former Coal Mining Site in Durham

15 Jan 2024  by solarpowerportal   
ByZachary ViscontiPosted on January 14, 2024Toyota has had a long history of speaking out against an all-out transition to electric vehicles (EVs), continually pointing to hydrogen technology and continued gas vehicle production as important pieces of the puzzle. In a recent statement, a Toyota chairman referenced a new project for the automaker, and while he didn’t share details, he did emphasize how hybrids and internal combustion engines (ICE) “still play a role” in reaching carbon neutrality goals.

After Toyota boosted its 2025 battery-electric vehicle (BEV) production forecast in November, the company later that month said that it expects to produce more hydrogen cars than its recently announced solid-state EVs by 2030. On Friday, former Toyota CEO and current chairman Akio Toyoda said that the automaker has gained approval from executives to start a project to “promote engine development anew,” with messaging on high-performance ICEs expected to play a big role for the company in 2024, according to Automotive News.

“There is still a role for engines as a practical means of achieving carbon neutrality,” Toyoda said on Friday during the Tokyo Auto Salon conference. “So, let us refine engine technology.”

Toyoda says that he was given approval from current Toyota CEO Koji Sato and other members of the executive body to follow through on the project. While he didn’t provide any further details on the initiative, he reiterated themes around BEV adoption that he has echoed through much of his career, highlighting hydrogen and the need for a smooth social shift to electrification.

“Battery electric vehicles do not represent the only way to achieve carbon neutrality,” Toyoda added. “Should we not all have enthusiasm for cars as we take on the challenge.”

Bluefield has now secured planning permission for 400MW of solar and battery storage projects. Image: Bluefield Development.

Durham County Council has granted planning permission for a new 49.9MW solar farm to be built on a former coal mining site in Durham.

A planning application was submitted in February 2023 outlining Bluefield Development’s proposal to build a solar farm on 158 acres of classified Grade 3B pasture land at Bluestone farm, which is currently used for sheep grazing.

Located to the north of Cockfield and south-east of the village of High Lands, the developer confirmed that the current farmer has “agreed to resume sheep grazing around the solar arrays once the plant is operational, removing fears of an impact on food production.”

Although not a planning requirement, the application proposal set out plans to see Bluefield establish a £400,000 community fund which councillor Jonathan Elmer, said was “so important in gaining wider acceptability for these sorts of schemes.”

“We are delighted to have secured planning permission for our Bluestone solar farm project. An area of land that was once used to extract fossil fuels that powered our industrial past, will now be utilised to produce significant and sustainable clean energy for the future,” said Alan Connolly, development director at Bluefield Renewable Development Ltd.

According to Bluefield’s managing director Jonathan Selwyn Bluefield has now secured planning permission for 400MW of solar and battery storage projects – this includes a 49.9MW solar farm, co-located with a 60MW battery energy storage system (BESS) in Northumberland.

“A further 325MW has received planning in conjunction with our development partners,” added Connolly.


Keywords

More News

Loading……