Change in the air for UK power
The removal of restrictions on onshore wind will reduce costs and emissions. It may even tempt the majors to diversify into the sector
The glaring omission from the UK’s renewable power success story has been the ability of onshore wind—almost certainly the cheapest form of renewable energy—to compete on a level playing field for supply contracts. That all changed in March, and the sector looks set for a renaissance. Onshore wind had been a booming sector until the UK’s right-leaning Conservative party won a parliamentary majority in a 2015 poll, freeing them from a coalition with the centre-left Liberal Democrats. That allowed the Conservatives to pursue a not-in-my-backyard agenda favoured by the party’s rural supporters. Planning applications were effectively subject to veto by local campaign groups and onshore wind was

Also in this section
28 March 2025
The massive expansion of the Northern Lights project in Norway is the clearest sign yet that the European oil and gas companies mean business when it comes to CCS
27 March 2025
Awards celebrate global innovation, leadership and achievement across the energy sector’s people, projects, technologies and companies.
20 March 2025
While advanced economies debate peak fossil fuel demand, billions of people still lack access to reliable and affordable energy, especially in the Global South
14 March 2025
Ignoring questions of sustainability will not make the problems they focus on go away