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Botley West Solar Farm: Land near airport removed from plans
Botley West Solar Farm: Land near airport removed from plans

BBC News

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • BBC News

Botley West Solar Farm: Land near airport removed from plans

A portion of land near an airport will no longer be included in plans for one of Europe's largest solar farms. Botley West Solar Farm will cover about 1,000 hectares (2,471 acres) of countryside at three sites in west Oxfordshire if approved. Developers Photo Vault Development Partners (PVDP) said it had now scaled the proposal back by 10 hectares - equivalent to about 16 football pitches - after Oxford Airport raised concerns about building on land that could potentially be needed in the event of an emergency landing. The £800m development has been designated as a Nationally Significant Infrastructure Project and is currently being evaluated by the government. It would see panels installed in countryside north of Woodstock, west of Kidlington and west of said it would now not be installing solar panels on "sensitive areas" identified for potential emergency landings by aircraft operating from Oxford Airport."We have... agreed to remove panels from areas identified as particularly sensitive, in direct response to local concerns," Mark Owen-Lloyd, director of Botley West Solar Farm, said."These changes reflect our commitment to working in partnership and cooperation with the communities around Botley West and ensuring the project delivers real, lasting benefits where they are most needed," he developers also announced that it had doubled its community benefit fund to £440,000 a year following discussions with local suggested the investment could be used to upgrade community facilities, develop youth and skills programmes and to support local sustainability announcements come in the same week that West Oxfordshire District Council said the development would cause "major harm lasting generations" and should be "dramatically reduced" in comments, which included that the proposals were "detrimental" to the area, came in the council's final written submission to the said it disagreed with the local authority and had made several changes to the proposed locations of solar panels. You can follow BBC Oxfordshire on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.

Tensions erupt at UK's most exclusive billionaire's private jet fair
Tensions erupt at UK's most exclusive billionaire's private jet fair

Daily Mirror

time20-05-2025

  • Business
  • Daily Mirror

Tensions erupt at UK's most exclusive billionaire's private jet fair

The Elite London in Wycombe Air Park on the outskirts of London draws in a crowd of well-heeled and deep pocketed punters looking for their next private jet or helicopter An ultra-exclusive event erupted into chaos over the weekend. Visit the Elite London at Wycombe Air Park on the outskirts of London and you'll find yourself rubbing up against some seriously well-clad shoulders. The event is aimed at those interested in buying a new private jet, upgrading their helicopter, or purchasing a second yacht. It also features a series of fun exhibits, including virtual golfing, clay pigeon shooting organised by the Churchill family's gun firm, and IV drips for those who indulge in the onsite bar a little too much. ‌ One of the big draws for the cash-rich but time-poor is that you can fly your private jet or helicopter directly to the event. ‌ "The Elite London's unique airport setting allows aircraft owners and private pilots to fly directly to the event. Arrive by air and benefit from complimentary show entry for you and your passengers. Wycombe Air Park's 750 metre tarmac and 610 metre grass runways and helipads can accommodate everything from piston aircraft, turboprops and helicopters. Business aircraft can land at the nearby Oxford Airport where a shuttle awaits to transfer," Elite London's website reads. Among the attendees over the weekend was a small group who were less impressed with the displays of excess. Marching into the centre of the private jet fair, Climate Resistance protesters held up placards and chanted for the abolition of billionaires. The campaigning group is calling for a 100% tax on assets over £10 million, alongside global wealth redistribution, an end to what it describes as "wage theft and worker exploitation", and public investment in a "fair, worker-led energy transition." Climate Resistance targeted the fair due to the particularly high carbon costs associated with private jets and helicopters. Overall private aviation emissions increased by 46% between 2019-2023, with industry expectations of continued strong growth, according to one Nature journal Communications Earth & Environment study. It also found that most of these small planes spew more heat-trapping carbon dioxide in about two hours of flying than the average person does in about a year. ‌ In 2023, roughly a quarter million of the super wealthy, who were worth a total of $31 trillion, emitted 17.2 million tons (15.6 million metric tons) of carbon dioxide flying in private jets. That's about the same amount as the overall yearly emissions of the 67 million people who live in Tanzania. Stefan Gossling, a transportation researcher at the business school of Sweden's Linnaeus University, said the issue wasn't so much the emissions, which remain a small part of those produced globally, but the lack of fairness. ‌ 'The damage is done by those with a lot of money and the cost is borne by those with very little money,' Gossling said. A separate report by Oxfam claimed that billionaires emit more carbon pollution in 90 minutes than the average person does in a lifetime. Armed with banners reading 'ban private jets' and 'wealth tax now,' the protesters were quickly hauled away by security guards. Sam Simons from Climate Resistance said: 'A single private flight to America and back emits more carbon than the average Briton does in a decade. The climate crisis is propelled by the super-rich and cannot be averted while extreme wealth is being used to fund the destructive lifestyles being sold with champagne at Wycombe Air Park. A livable future can't be a luxury. Abolish billionaires and tax private flying out of existence.'

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