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Smart meter rollout threatens countryside with ‘oppressive' 40ft masts
Smart meter rollout threatens countryside with ‘oppressive' 40ft masts

Yahoo

time17-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Smart meter rollout threatens countryside with ‘oppressive' 40ft masts

A nationwide rollout of smart meters threatens to clutter the countryside with 40-foot poles. Water companies are preparing to install dedicated wireless networks to transmit the readings of a planned 10m devices that will collect live data on household and business water usage. Under the proposals, the so-called 'telemetry' poles will appear in already-crowded streets to handle the data, with companies exploiting planning rules brought in by the last government that effectively allow poles to be put up with little or no consultation or warnings for residents. Regions already hit by the new devices include the historic town of Berwick-upon-Tweed, in Northumberland, where 20 planning applications, each for multiple poles, have been lodged to support Northumbrian Water's smart meter programme. The plans have generated a wave of objections, with locals complaining of 'an unsightly clutter of overbearing poles' that it is claimed will be 'obstructing natural light and creating an oppressive outlook'. Similar schemes are also generating fury further south. Essex and Suffolk Water intends to put up an initial 157 poles in Great Yarmouth alone, with plans for hundreds more around the region. Graham Plant, Norfolk County Council's cabinet member for highways, transport and infrastructure, told a council meeting: 'I'm seriously concerned because this isn't just Great Yarmouth going to get hit, but all the major towns, all the villages are going to get these telegraph poles put up.' Anglian Water, which provides water for the rest of Norfolk, has also been installing pillars to monitor smart meter usage. The plan has infuriated Norfolk County Council, which argued that existing networks should have been used rather than putting up scores of new poles. Ptolemy Dean, official Surveyor of the Fabric of Westminster Abbey, and author of Streetscapes, on the evolution of street architecture, said the water metering poles would be an aesthetic disaster for Britain's towns and villages. He said: 'This is a nasty, cheap short-term fix that will damage public spaces and devalue the homes of people living nearby.' The main contractor putting up the poles is Hull-based Connexin, which is already working for multiple water companies. A spokesman said thousands more poles were needed around the UK. 'Water companies need data and this is the best way to collect it,' he said. Connexin is exploiting 'permitted development' planning rules brought in by the last government that effectively allow the company to erect poles wherever it wants with little or no consultation or warnings for residents. Under UK planning law telecoms poles which are less than 15 metres high are included under permitted development so there is no need for planning permission. Connexin's spokesman said: 'We would like to install the wireless routers on existing infrastructure but there is often nothing suitable. It is frustrating for the owners of nearby properties but we are erecting them under permitted development rules which allow us to do that.' Ofwat, the water regulator, which is strongly in favour of smart meters, distanced itself from the row. A spokesman said: 'Water companies are responsible for installing their own equipment and technology and following their local authorities' rules and regulations. 'It is not for Ofwat the economic water regulator to determine how and where poles are installed locally.' Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

Smart meter rollout threatens countryside with ‘oppressive' 40ft masts
Smart meter rollout threatens countryside with ‘oppressive' 40ft masts

Telegraph

time17-05-2025

  • Business
  • Telegraph

Smart meter rollout threatens countryside with ‘oppressive' 40ft masts

A nationwide rollout of smart meters threatens to clutter the countryside with 40-foot poles. Water companies are preparing to install dedicated wireless networks to transmit the readings of a planned 10m devices that will collect live data on household and business water usage. Under the proposals, the so-called 'telemetry' poles will appear in already-crowded streets to handle the data, with companies exploiting planning rules brought in by the last government that effectively allow poles to be put up with little or no consultation or warnings for residents. Regions already hit by the new devices include the historic town of Berwick-upon-Tweed, in Northumberland, where 20 planning applications, each for multiple poles, have been lodged to support Northumbrian Water's smart meter programme. The plans have generated a wave of objections, with locals complaining of 'an unsightly clutter of overbearing poles' that it is claimed will be 'obstructing natural light and creating an oppressive outlook'. Similar schemes are also generating fury further south. Essex and Suffolk Water intends to put up an initial 157 poles in Great Yarmouth alone, with plans for hundreds more around the region. Graham Plant, Norfolk County Council's cabinet member for highways, transport and infrastructure, told a council meeting: 'I'm seriously concerned because this isn't just Great Yarmouth going to get hit, but all the major towns, all the villages are going to get these telegraph poles put up.' Anglian Water, which provides water for the rest of Norfolk, has also been installing pillars to monitor smart meter usage. The plan has infuriated Norfolk County Council, which argued that existing networks should have been used rather than putting up scores of new poles. Ptolemy Dean, official Surveyor of the Fabric of Westminster Abbey, and author of Streetscapes, on the evolution of street architecture, said the water metering poles would be an aesthetic disaster for Britain's towns and villages. He said: 'This is a nasty, cheap short-term fix that will damage public spaces and devalue the homes of people living nearby.' The main contractor putting up the poles is Hull-based Connexin, which is already working for multiple water companies. A spokesman said thousands more poles were needed around the UK. 'Water companies need data and this is the best way to collect it,' he said. Connexin is exploiting 'permitted development' planning rules brought in by the last government that effectively allow the company to erect poles wherever it wants with little or no consultation or warnings for residents. Under UK planning law telecoms poles which are less than 15 metres high are included under permitted development so there is no need for planning permission. Connexin's spokesman said: 'We would like to install the wireless routers on existing infrastructure but there is often nothing suitable. It is frustrating for the owners of nearby properties but we are erecting them under permitted development rules which allow us to do that.' Ofwat, the water regulator, which is strongly in favour of smart meters, distanced itself from the row. A spokesman said: 'Water companies are responsible for installing their own equipment and technology and following their local authorities' rules and regulations. 'It is not for Ofwat the economic water regulator to determine how and where poles are installed locally.'

Smart meter rollout threatens countryside with ‘oppressive' 40ft masts
Smart meter rollout threatens countryside with ‘oppressive' 40ft masts

Yahoo

time17-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Smart meter rollout threatens countryside with ‘oppressive' 40ft masts

A nationwide rollout of smart meters threatens to clutter the countryside with 40-foot poles. Water companies are preparing to install dedicated wireless networks to transmit the readings of a planned 10m devices that will collect live data on household and business water usage. Under the proposals, the so-called 'telemetry' poles will appear in already-crowded streets to handle the data, with companies exploiting planning rules brought in by the last government that effectively allow poles to be put up with little or no consultation or warnings for residents. Regions already hit by the new devices include the historic town of Berwick-upon-Tweed, in Northumberland, where 20 planning applications, each for multiple poles, have been lodged to support Northumbrian Water's smart meter programme. The plans have generated a wave of objections, with locals complaining of 'an unsightly clutter of overbearing poles' that it is claimed will be 'obstructing natural light and creating an oppressive outlook'. Similar schemes are also generating fury further south. Essex and Suffolk Water intends to put up an initial 157 poles in Great Yarmouth alone, with plans for hundreds more around the region. Graham Plant, Norfolk County Council's cabinet member for highways, transport and infrastructure, told a council meeting: 'I'm seriously concerned because this isn't just Great Yarmouth going to get hit, but all the major towns, all the villages are going to get these telegraph poles put up.' Anglian Water, which provides water for the rest of Norfolk, has also been installing pillars to monitor smart meter usage. The plan has infuriated Norfolk County Council, which argued that existing networks should have been used rather than putting up scores of new poles. Ptolemy Dean, official Surveyor of the Fabric of Westminster Abbey, and author of Streetscapes, on the evolution of street architecture, said the water metering poles would be an aesthetic disaster for Britain's towns and villages. He said: 'This is a nasty, cheap short-term fix that will damage public spaces and devalue the homes of people living nearby.' The main contractor putting up the poles is Hull-based Connexin, which is already working for multiple water companies. A spokesman said thousands more poles were needed around the UK. 'Water companies need data and this is the best way to collect it,' he said. Connexin is exploiting 'permitted development' planning rules brought in by the last government that effectively allow the company to erect poles wherever it wants with little or no consultation or warnings for residents. Under UK planning law telecoms poles which are less than 15 metres high are included under permitted development so there is no need for planning permission. Connexin's spokesman said: 'We would like to install the wireless routers on existing infrastructure but there is often nothing suitable. It is frustrating for the owners of nearby properties but we are erecting them under permitted development rules which allow us to do that.' Ofwat, the water regulator, which is strongly in favour of smart meters, distanced itself from the row. A spokesman said: 'Water companies are responsible for installing their own equipment and technology and following their local authorities' rules and regulations. 'It is not for Ofwat the economic water regulator to determine how and where poles are installed locally.' Sign in to access your portfolio

China is working on a jammer to send missiles after ‘ghost' fleet of warships
China is working on a jammer to send missiles after ‘ghost' fleet of warships

South China Morning Post

time07-05-2025

  • Science
  • South China Morning Post

China is working on a jammer to send missiles after ‘ghost' fleet of warships

In a naval combat simulation conducted by Chinese researchers, an anti-ship missile targets a fleet of eight People's Liberation Army warships showing on its radar. Advertisement But it is not an armada – it is just a single vessel. Four electronic warfare devices circling the ship created the illusion, sending signals that could deceive even an advanced radar from a distance. It was developed by a team from the Beijing Research Institute of Telemetry, an aerospace defence contractor. They detailed the 'unprecedented' technology in a peer-reviewed paper published in the Chinese-language Journal of Systems Engineering and Electronics on February 28. Advertisement Their study suggested that networked 1-bit jammers could be used to trick enemy missiles into pursuing 'ghost' fleets while the real warships avoided the radar entirely.

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