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Renewable energy project approvals hit record high in GB in 2025, data shows

about 19 hours ago
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A record number of renewable energy projects were given the go-ahead in Great Britain in 2025, after planning approvals almost doubled year on year, according to an analysis,The energy capacity of new battery, wind, and solar projects that received approval climbed to 45GW this year, 96% higher than in 2024, according to data from Cornwall Insight,The boom was driven by applications to build new battery storage, which almost doubled to 28,6GW this year from 14,9GW in 2024.

Planning approvals for offshore wind developments jumped more than sevenfold to 9.9GW from 1.3GW last year.Planning approvals for battery, wind and solar power have risen by more than 400% over the past five years.The energy secretary, Ed Miliband, said: “After years of delay and underinvestment, this government is keeping its promise to take back control of Britain’s energy with clean homegrown power.

“Every project we approve, every investment we make is about getting the country off the rollercoaster of fossil fuel markets, protecting households and lowering bills for good,”The record-breaking surge in planning approvals signals real momentum in the UK’s energy transition, according to Robin Clarke, a senior analyst at Cornwall Insight, but many could still face delays starting up,“On paper, the UK’s renewables pipeline has never looked stronger,” he said,“But approvals don’t generate electricity, and we urgently need to move from ambition to actual delivery of these projects,Too much capacity is still stuck in queues or waiting on grid upgrades.

Grid bottlenecks remain one of the biggest risks to turning today’s approvals into tomorrow’s power.”Although approvals have accelerated, the pace of projects starting up has lagged behind, largely as a result of long construction timelines and grid connection delays, according to Cornwall.Many projects have been stuck in a “first come, first served” connections queue, but recent reforms to remove “zombie projects” from the queue and shift to a “first ready, first needed, first connected” approach is expected to clear some of the bottlenecks and quicken the pace of Britain’s renewable energy buildout.Britain’s energy system operator pulled the plug on hundreds of electricity generation projects earlier this month to clear a huge backlog that had stopped many “shovel-ready” schemes from connecting to the power grid.More than half of the energy projects in the queue will be removed to make way for about £40bn-worth of schemes considered the most likely to help meet the government’s goal to build a virtually zero-carbon power system by 2030.

Britain’s growing renewables industry may also have accelerated in 2025 as developers rush to get their projects over the line before tougher rules over which projects can connect to the grid, and upcoming local elections that could create uncertainty over future renewable energy planning policies,Clarke said: “The recent grid connection reforms are a significant step forward, and should help clear some of the backlog, but they won’t solve everything,We need faster decisions, more investment in the grid, and real collaboration between government, regulators and industry,Without that, these record numbers risk becoming just another statistic,”Cornwall added that the rapid expansion of renewable projects would also mean the UK must reinforce and build out its electricity grid at scale.

“The current infrastructure was never designed for such high volumes of intermittent generation and storage, so investment in grid flexibility, transmission upgrades, and smart technologies will be critical to ensure these projects can deliver power where and when it’s needed,” it said.
politicsSee all
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‘We have to go’: longest-serving lord reflects on looming Labour eviction

At the age of 84, David Trefgarne is not the oldest active peer in the House of Lords. But now well into his 64th year in the upper house, he is very much the longest serving. And in the next few months, it will all end.The 2nd Baron Trefgarne, to use his formal title, is one of the few hereditary peers still helping to make UK law, the tail end of a legislative chain dating back to the 13th century and Magna Carta. When one of these laws, the House of Lords (hereditary peers) bill, receives royal assent some time in the spring, that will be that

about 16 hours ago
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Unite leader tells Labour to ‘stop being embarrassed’ to be voice of workers

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about 19 hours ago
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‘Zack is a phenomenal leader’: Siân Berry on the Green party’s next steps as membership doubles

“Someone has to be out there making the narrative for social security. Someone has to fight the corrosive attitudes to people on benefits,” says Siân Berry, who has just finished her first year as a Green MP in the House of Commons.She is speaking to the Guardian in her Brighton constituency office, formerly occupied by the legendary Caroline Lucas who flew a lone flag as the only member of parliament for the Green party for 14 years.Now, however, there are four MPs including Berry, battling together, she says, to hold the space for the left at a moment when it feels the far right has hypnotised the entire political body. “Often Adrian [Ramsay, MP for Waveney Valley] is the only one bringing up animal welfare in Defra questions, or Carla [Denyer, MP for Bristol Central] will be the only person arguing for a refugee’s right to work to the Home Office

about 19 hours ago
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Cooper launches review of ‘serious failures’ in Alaa Abd el-Fattah case

Yvette Cooper has launched a review looking into “serious information failures” around the case of a British-Egyptian activist welcomed to the UK despite his past tweets now called “abhorrent” by the government.Keir Starmer said he was “delighted” by Alaa Abd el-Fattah’s arrival on Friday but a political storm erupted after social media posts from a decade ago were unearthed including some in which the activist had called for Zionists to be killed.Alaa Abd el-Fattah, who landed in London from Egypt on Boxing Day after the British government successfully negotiated his release, said he apologised “unequivocally” for his posts after opposition parties called for him to be deported and his citizenship revoked.But on Tuesday the activist faced fresh criticism from the Conservatives after his official Facebook account appeared recently to have liked a social media post suggesting “Zionists against Alaa Abd el-Fattah” were behind a “campaign” against him.Successive governments led by the Tories and Labour had advocated for Abd el-Fattah’s release over the past 10 years, almost all of which he spent in prison in Egypt for his political beliefs, including his opposition to the treatment of dissidents

about 20 hours ago
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‘Too complacent’: how Blair’s advisers misjudged his disastrous WI speech

Tony Blair’s key advisers agonised over the writing of his notoriously ill-judged speech to the Women’s Institute (WI) which saw the then prime minister heckled and slow hand-clapped before 10,000 members at Wembley Arena, newly released documents reveal.Despite the WI explicitly warning they were “wary of anything that smacked of capital P politics”, Blair’s aides were critical of his first draft and bombarded him with additions to inject more policy.Fresh from paternity leave after the birth of his son Leo, Blair believed the annual WI conference in 2000 allowed for a more personal and reflective speech and an opportunity to blend tradition and modernity to appeal to middle England.But his communications chief, Alastair Campbell, wrote of the first draft: “There is not much sense of a recharged, refocused Blair firing on all fronts, and in parts, a danger of coming over as rather Majoresque.”Particular lines that irked Campbell included Blair saying he applauded the Tate Modern “even though I don’t always understand it” and describing any suggestion of doing away with the old-fashioned “pomp and pageantry of the queen’s speech in parliament” as an “unnecessary act of destruction of an ancient and loved ceremony”

1 day ago
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Brown’s allies could wreck Labour’s 2005 election hopes, Mandelson warned

Peter Mandelson warned Tony Blair not to allow Gordon Brown’s supporters to wreck Labour’s 2005 general election campaign from within, according to newly released government files.Relations between Blair and his chancellor were strained in the autumn of 2004 as Labour prepared to try for a third successive election victory. Brown and his allies believed the prime minister had reneged on a promise to step down towards the end of Labour’s second term to allow him to take over.In one file released to the National Archives in Kew, west London, the now Lord Mandelson warned Blair that such tensions would need to be carefully managed during the election campaign.Before leaving for Brussels to take up the post of Britain’s EU commissioner, the former cabinet minister said one of the challenges would be “agreeing where GB’s people can be included without giving them a veto or scope for insider demolition”

1 day ago
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