Unpublished article that was written for Autumn 2025
For over a decade Landworker has reported on destructive
developments on Walshaw Moor blanket bog. This comprises part of the 245,000
acres of upland peatlands nationally. These form the UK’s largest carbon land
store and which makes them essential for mitigating extreme weather events such
as flooding. They are also one of the most diverse habitats worldwide.
In 2014, Natural England handed out on behalf of the
coalition government over £2.5 million to landowner Richard Bannister to help him
burn the bog. This facilitated grouse shooting for his chums. Over the
following years many local residents in Mytholmroyd and Hebden Bridge were to become
convinced that the increased flooding they experienced were the result of the
destruction.
Further public monies were spent on increased flood
defences. Due to dissolved organic carbon entering the water supply, Yorkshire
Water also needed to spend more on increased treatment for pollution. Customers
had to foot the bill.
Yet remarkably, Walshaw Moor may now become the first peatland
in Britain to have built on it an onshore wind farm, which would dwarf anything
to date.
Calderdale Wind Farm Ltd (CWFL), who are disputing claims
that it is one of many similar schemes they hope to construct, assert that the
electricity generated from the scheme would power 286,000 homes.
There is strong local opposition to the proposals. Over 2,500
people in the Calder Valley constituency signed a national petition of over 15,000
signatures calling for a ban on wind farms on protected peatland. Although the
government has rejected this, campaigners from the long-established Ban the
Burn campaign group, who met MPs on a Parliamentary visit, have noted that planning
minster Matthew Pennycock mentioned blanket bog during debates on the Planning
and Infrastructure Bill.
This legislation has been criticised by environmental
campaigners who contend it will remove protections for important habitat and
species.
The Bill is currently being examined in the House of Lords. Ban
the Burn, which otherwise supports wind farms, is lobbying Peers and hope some
will present amendments blocking wind farms on peat bog.
Jenny Shepherd of Ban the Burn, which also believes CWFL
should be required to provide additional information to Calderdale Council’s
planning department to enable local residents to properly study the planning
application, wants to make contact with people in windy, peaty constituencies.
“These number around 30 across parts of Northumberland,
Exmoor, Dartmoor and the Lake District. The outcome of the Walshaw Moor
application will have significant
implications for these localities. Some readers might want to alert their MPs,”
said Shepherd who claims that work wise it would be far better for the
government to back restoring blanket bog “as this will help build a skills base
to help with conserving and restoring the source of 5% of the UK’s carbon
emissions and which need reducing to tackle global warming.”
Jenny can be contacted on 07309 388887
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