Man wins High Court appeal battle over wind turbine
A LISKEARD man has won a High Court order quashing a Government inspector’s decision to grant planning permission for a wind turbine near his home.
A judge ruled the decision-making process conducted by a planning inspector was flawed and the proposal for the turbine at High Down, Redland, Cornwall, must be reconsidered.
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The ruling at the High Court in London was a victory for Daniel Mageean, of Redland Farm, St Ive, Liskeard.
The case is one of several legal actions involving wind turbines that are coming before the courts in a backlash by “local people” to the Government’s push for renewable energy.
Mr Mageean is a leading member of local campaign group Green Caradon Against Turbines (Green CATS) and went to court to get the case reassessed by Communities and Local Government Secretary Eric Pickles.
His solicitor Richard Buxton said after the ruling: “As the permission has been quashed, the secretary of state will now have to consider whether there should be an environmental impact assessment.
“In particular, he will have to consider whether the proposed development is indeed likely to have significant environmental effects in the light of the designation of a world heritage site so close to the turbine.”
The planning inspector granted permission to the Truro-based Cornwall Light & Power Company on appeal, after Cornwall Council had found that the turbine – up to 80 metres high at the tip of the blade – would be detrimental to the character and appearance of the surrounding landscape.
The inspector took the view that the turbine would be between four and six kilometres away from two local designated Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB), and that the turbine would not have a detrimental effect on the scenic beauty of those AONB.
The inspector also found that the turbine would not adversely affect the closer Caradon Mining World Heritage Site, on the basis that it had been designated because of its social and historical importance rather than for its landscape quality.
Today Judge Robinson, sitting at London’s High Court, said the inspector had relied on a 2003 “screening direction” by the Government Office for the South West, made before Caradon’s designation as a world heritage site, which concluded an environmental impact assessment was not necessary.
The judge ruled the inspector had erred by not referring the screening direction back to the Secretary of State for reconsideration.
The judge ordered the Communities Secretary to pay half of Mr Mageean’s legal costs, around £15,000.
She refused the minister permission to appeal against her decision, although he can ask the Court of Appeal directly to consider the case.








7 Comments
by wg, plymouth
Wednesday, July 28 2010, 10:08PM
“They are good for killing all those pesky birds as well.”
by i m alrightjack, well away
Wednesday, July 28 2010, 8:58PM
“not bothered, they re in cornwall.”
by 42, cornwall
Wednesday, July 28 2010, 8:52PM
“You are correct Nik. SO2 acts against the so called greenhouse gases so in fact and maybe the reason for climate change may be the imbalance created by unleaded fuel.
PS - has anyone yet calculated a cost benefit analsyis on wind turbines. At what point does the co2 emissions created to make them be counterbalanced by the co2 emisions they save? I think, therefore I am”
by Nik, London
Wednesday, July 28 2010, 7:21PM
“I think these turbine look quite good but the down side to them is the noise they are not exactly the quietest things around.
But it seems the government is determined to plough on with this green policy - perhaps they should revert back to leaded petrol as it is less harmful than this unleaded rubbish we put into the cars these days”
by paul, mutley
Wednesday, July 28 2010, 5:56PM
“So he would prefer that we all choked on gas or coal fumes or even a risky nuclear power plant.”
by Laura, Plymouth
Wednesday, July 28 2010, 4:15PM
“Let us hope his conscience is big enough for a coal-fired power station.”
by Mick, Barbican
Wednesday, July 28 2010, 3:59PM
“I think wind turbines look great, giving the landscape an exciting futuristic sci-fi look..:)”