
The Climate Change Committee(CCC) is an independent group of experts who advise the government on how to reduce our carbon emissions. It recommends that 54GW of solar capacity is needed by 2035. Indeed, the UK government has now set an even more ambitious target of 70 GW of solar energy by 2035. CPRE. .
Both for new buildings and for retrofits, we support a ‘fabric first’ approach. This approach focuses on minimising energy use before turning to. .
Then there are car parks. Covering land with tarmac and storing cars on it has no place in 21st century land-use policies. Sure, cars need to be parked, but if we put homes above them and a. .
As part of our campaign, we are calling on the government to unleash a rooftop revolution by urgently taking these steps: 1. Managing the potential impacts of solar energy schemes on the countryside by developing a “land-use. .
We’re running a campaignto urge the government to fully realise the potential of solar on rooftops and other ‘grey’ spaces. From warehouses to.
[pdf] 
Energy storage is a potential substitute for, or complement to, almost every aspect of a power system, including generation, transmission, and demand flexibility. Storage should be co-optimized with clean generation, transmission systems, and strategies to reward consumers for making their electricity use more flexible. .
Goals that aim for zero emissions are more complex and expensive than NetZero goals that use negative emissions technologies to achieve a reduction of 100%. The pursuit of a zero, rather than net-zero, goal for the. .
The need to co-optimize storage with other elements of the electricity system, coupled with uncertain climate change impacts on demand and supply, necessitate advances in analytical tools to. .
The intermittency of wind and solar generation and the goal of decarbonizing other sectors through electrification increase the benefit of. .
Lithium-ion batteries are being widely deployed in vehicles, consumer electronics, and more recently, in electricity storage systems. These batteries have, and will.
[pdf] The existing solar NSIPS regime applies to projects where the proposed generation capacity is more than 50MW in England – estimated by the government to typically consist of around 100,000 to 150,000 solar panels and cover between 125 to 200 acres – and 350MW in Wales The government is not proposing to. .
The draft revised EN-3 retains the helpful steer given in the initial 2021 proposed reforms that impacts from solar farms should be considered as. .
The draft revised EN-3 sets out factors around site selection for solar farms that will play into NSIP planning decisions. The proposed new policy confirms that development of ground.
[pdf]