Radio masts on west Dorset skyline to be replaced with £100m solar panel scheme

NO ONE RECEIVING: One of the radio transmitter masts at Rampisham is felled to be replaced by solar panels in a £100m development which will bring in up 70 full-time jobs NO ONE RECEIVING: One of the radio transmitter masts at Rampisham is felled to be replaced by solar panels in a £100m development which will bring in up 70 full-time jobs

ICONIC radio masts on the west Dorset skyline look set to be replaced with solar panels in a scheme worth up to £100million.

All but three of the 34 existing steel towers at Rampisham – some more than 100 metres high – are due for demolition if permission is given for a solar panel park that will create around 70 full time jobs.

If plans get the go ahead there will still be three masts left, for TV and mobile phone signals and potential future wireless broadband.

Giles Frampton, business development director of applicants Solar Power Generation, said: “It represents a direct investment into West Dorset of between £60 and £100million.

“I am really passionate about creating job opportunities in my native West Dorset. This represents a significant investment.

“We are about to create probably 60 to 70 full-time jobs at Rampisham.”

Some of the towers have been kept in response to community consultation although not everyone wants to see even those three kept. Gillian Ford, from Rampisham said it was an ideal time to restore the skyline at the site between Toller Porcorum and Corscombe.

She said: “I have no problem with the solar park proposal. Particularly, if the applications are going to continue to use the land for grazing and protect the habitat. I do however take issue with the more recent suggestion to keep two of the corner pylons as ‘part of the identity of the site’.

“Although I can understand that some may feel a certain nostalgia for the site, I feel this is a once in a lifetime chance to restore the skyline of this beautiful bit of Dorset.”

There is one letter of objection to the council from Alastair Pollard, of Hawkchurch, who thinks it would be the industrialisation of a nearly 200-acre site in an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty and should be refused.

The plans include two-metre security fence and six four to six-metre high CCTV cameras guarding the 163,000 panels spread over 75 acres, covering about a third of the 189-acre site.

The panels will generate approximately 40 mega watts of electricity and with the cost of production should achieve an overall positive ‘energy balance’ after approximately two years.

Director of the Dorset branch of the Campaign to Protect Rural Engand (CPRE) Trevor Bevins said: “CPRE is currently consulting members who live close to the former BBC site before submitting a formal response.

“But our initial reaction is delight that the majority of the arrays will be removed from this prominent location.

“CPRE does support renewable energy and as such generally welcomes sympathetic solar panel applications.

“We do, however, often have reservations about the associated developments which sometimes accompany solar ‘farm’ applications – primarily associated security fencing, inappropriate building designs and, in some locations even security lights which can result in schemes looking more like an open prison. We hope that this won’t be the case at Rampisham.” Comments can be submitted to West Dorset District Council until January 25.

Transmission site has chequered history THE former radio transmitting site was bought by the BBC in the late 1930s when there were fears of wartime attacks at its Daventry base.

The first broadcast went out on February 16, 1941.

Ironically two fighter planes blew up the diesel house and shepherd’s hut the following summer – two days after the same Focke-Wulf 190s killed four people in Bridport.

The attack did not interrupt transmissions.

In 1947 severe icing meant the station was off air for two weeks. Snowstorms in 1963 cut the site off for ten days.

In 1967 a helicopter was forced to land after one of the transmitting signals inflated its sea ditch buoyancy bags.

Re-engineering of the site had to take place in 1980 to overcome Russian jamming of BBC transmissions The BBC sold the site to Merlin Communications in 1997 and it was operating 24-hours a day, seven days a week broadcasting the BBC World Service in 52 different languages.

Comments(5)

tramp_about_town says...
11:25am Thu 17 Jan 13

Not in my back yard! Solar farms are noisey and don't work. They also contribute to global warming by sucking up the suns rays making the earth hotter. The glare of the panels is also likely to interupt the annual migration of the Mongolian Snow chicken. Terrible news!

muscliffman says...
11:25am Thu 17 Jan 13

Here we go again, someone is going to be doing very nicely with our 'green scam' money - it won't be us!

jobsworthwatch says...
11:41am Thu 17 Jan 13

Solar panels should be on buildings not on land that can be used for food production.

BarrHumbug says...
11:51am Thu 17 Jan 13

Those in East Dorset should propose the Navitas Bay wind farm be sighted at the location instead? After all there are already towers there so the locals shouldn't be too bothered and they won't have to erect any security fencing, cameras or searchlights because who's going to nick a 250m wind turbine in the night?

rusty james says...
12:32pm Thu 17 Jan 13

Chop down ALL the radio masts! Anything to stop 'Steve Wright in the afternoon'.

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