A new report by the Electricity System Operator (ESO) lays out their recommendations for how the offshore and onshore network should develop throughout the 2030s.
Reacting to the ESO’s new , Cllr Colin Davie, executive councillor for economic development, environment and planning at ³ÉÈ˶¶Òõ, said:
“With an entire page of the report dedicated to Lincolnshire, it’s clear that National Grid’s plans to run 50m pylons all down our east coast could be the tip of the iceberg when it comes to large-scale energy infrastructure projects earmarked for the county.
“Throughout the report it emphasises that upgrading the country’s energy infrastructure needs to be done swiftly. The county council will ensure that this ‘need for speed’ does not come at the expense of proper, in-depth analysis of the impacts big projects will have on our landscape and our communities, and that all options are explored to keep those impacts to an absolute minimum.
“Be it pylons, substations, or new cable connections bringing energy onshore from windfarms out in the North Sea, we will not allow Lincolnshire to be a dumping ground for industrial scale development that harms the intrinsic quality of our county.
“We need to be reassured that the effects any proposals will have on the landscape, the local economy, and the environment have all been thoroughly considered and tested against Treasury Green book principles. In addition there has to be widespread public consultation with evidence that any proposals to be brought forward have been developed with the community voice at the heart of those proposals."
³ÉÈ˶¶Òõ has responded to National Grid’s recent consultation objecting to their proposal to run 140km of 50m high electricity pylons through the Lincolnshire countryside between Grimsby and Walpole in Norfolk. The council will also commission an independent report into to impact the plans would have on the area.
We will assess further development plans for the county once details become available.