How Many Wind Farms Are Really Planned?

This is another ‘quickie’, which I’m putting out partly so people can be aware of what might be in the pipeline, and also to see if anyone out there can add a little meat to the bones.

WHERE WE AT?

As is my wont, I’ll start by showing you the area in question. It’s some two or three miles south or south west of Caban-coch reservoir. Or six or seven miles north of Llanwrtyd.

To give you a better idea of the area I’m talking about, Bryn Rhudd is pinned on both maps reproduced below.

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Bute Energy, the ‘renewables’ arm of property company Parabola, has an ‘Energy Park’ planned here. For which the registered company was known as Bryn Glas Energy Park Ltd, until Wednesday, when it changed to Bryn Rhudd Energy Park Ltd.

Which doesn’t move the project very far in terms of distance, Bryn Glas and Bryn Rhudd being adjacent hills, but I find the change significant because it suggests things might now be moving with this previously quiescent entity.

Confirmation for the project comes from the Campaign for the Protection of Rural Wales. This map produced last year shows Bryn Glas as a proposal.

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That said, the project does not appear on the Bute Energy website. But there are a number of Bute projects – companies formed and registered with Companies House – that don’t appear on the Bute website.

Others are: Garreg Fawr, Waun Hesgog, Nant Ceiment, Nant Aman, Tarenni, Maesnant, Bryngwyn, Blaencothi, Llyn Lort II, Orddu. That’s 10 projects for which companies have been formed, but are not mentioned on the Bute website.

Maybe no progress has been made on these ten projects beyond general scoping and informal chats with landowners.

In addition, there are a number of Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS) for which companies have been formed. Six by my count.

And let’s not forget the pylons and the power lines. Mile after mile of them, to carry the electricity generated (when the wind is just right!) from remote Welsh locations to the consumers of that electricity in England.

As many of you know, I try to keep up with Bute’s activities, and here’s my updated factsheet. If anyone can add to, or correct it, don’t be shy about contributing.

WHAT MORE CAN I TELL YOU?

A big question in all these projects, and indeed, other projects, is – who owns the land, who stands to gain? A question that’s not easy to answer.

In the case of Bryn Rhudd, my first port of call was the Land Registry, but seeing as I had no title number I had to rely on finding it on the LR map. Which I think worked.

Here’s the title document for the land I located on the LR map. It’s known as Abergwesyn Commons. You’ll see it’s owned by the National Trust (NT); which seems to be confirmed by this map I found on the NT website. (Best of luck with the filters!)

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The NT land is the area in blue. I’ve highlighted Abergwesyn, to the south of the area that takes its name. To get your bearings relative to the maps you saw earlier use the reservoirs shown above the area in blue.

Unfortunately, there wasn’t a title plan available to download, as it was too large, and I didn’t have time to get it delivered by post.

Anyway, there’s another NT website, which has this to say . . .

Abergwesyn Commons stretch for 12 miles between the Nant Irfon valley in the west and Llanwrthwl in the east. Drygarn Fawr is the highest point on the commons, lying above the Nant Irfon valley.

Which appears to confirm this is the area we’re concerned with, and that Bute’s planned Bryn Rhudd Energy Park is on National Trust land.

Land Registry title documents can be intriguing when they provide a bit of history, which is the case with the one we’re looking at. In the recent history of the area we see names we’ve encountered before. And of course, they’re double-barrelled names.

First, there’s Legge-Bourke. I believe the land we’re looking at was sold to the National Trust by the Legge-Bourke family.

Whereas the Right Honourable James David Lord Gibson-Watt of the Wye M.C., P.C., and son, Julian Gibson Watt, were granted “sporting rights” over part of the land for 99 years from September 1984.

Other names mentioned were those you see below.

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Though it seems that somewhere along the way Devoy became Devoy-Williams. (An attempt to go native?) And Dai is a man of the law, as this report tells us.

I’m not sure whether he and Anjana are still an item, and maybe she runs the company Chillderness herself, or whether they’ve split. Either way, the Chillderness website explains the entry on the title document. (Chill in the wilderness – geddit!)

You’ll see from the website the company has a number of properties in Wales.

Hidden away in remote corners of the Chillderness Red Kite Estate in the Cambrian Mountains, Mid Wales, are four super-cool, off-grid glamping pods. The two Conkers (Earth Conker and Moon Conker) are insulated, all year round glamping pods. The forest by the river enfolds the two Tree Tents (Dragon’s Egg and Ynys Affalon), suspended in the canopy with treetop kitchens and outdoor bathing.

If you think ‘Affalon’ and the others are toe-curlers, wait until you see the properties in Sir Benfro. We have a nod to the Rimbaud of Cwmdonkin Drive with ‘Llareggub’ in Saundersfoot, then there’s ‘Mor (sic) and More’ in Amroth.

This is the kind of tourism that too often passes for Welsh: Buy out the natives then make money from trivialising their identity and culture.

But perhaps of more relevance to this inquiry might be what we see under the heading Property Register, which deals with parts of the original title that have been detached over the years.

For there, at No 7, we see that land was detached in September 2019 from the NT Abergwesyn Commons land, which might link to the planned wind farm. But this reference gives no new title number to check, which is frustrating.

Given what we know, I’ll conclude this section by saying it’s reasonable to assume that Bute Energy has some agreement in place with the National Trust for the area around Bryn Rhudd.

Otherwise, why launch the company, and keep it alive?

FINAL THOUGHTS

I always opposed the National Trust in Wales because it struck me as an ineffably English organisation, run by Home Counties hearties who would never understand or empathise with our history and identity.

Maybe devolution could have brought a change, if only arguing that the NT in Wales distanced itself from the parent body. But Corruption Bay was too busy anguishing over whether Picton should be disinterred and hung for what he might have done in the West Indies in the 18th century to worry about Wales in the 21st century.

More recently at the National Trust, tweeds and brogues gave way to green hair and anti-white racism. Predictably, this Wokist takeover brought in blind belief in the climate scam. Now we read of ‘Renewable energy in Wales‘, and just about every form of ‘renewables’ is mentioned . . . other than wind.

So I suggest we need a little honesty. A commodity rare in modern Wales. First from the National Trust.

On the assumption you own this land, do you have an agreement or an understanding with Bute Energy for a wind farm, or ‘Energy Park’, at Bryn Rhudd?

If so, have those who graze the land been informed or consulted?

To Bute Energy: What are your plans for Bryn Rhudd (formerly Bryn Glas)?

Also, what are your plans for the other 10 projects, each of which has a named company, but are not mentioned on your website? What stage have these projects reached?

These uplands of Elenydd are unspoilt and beautiful, among the wildest parts of Wales. That’s because they’re remote, which of course means no decent road access. Look again at the map for Bryn Rhudd to see what I mean.

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Most of the area is only traversable on foot, by horse, or by quad bike. Which means that the environmental damage caused in transporting and erecting huge wind turbines would outweigh any possible gain from a decade or two of expensive, intermittent, and unreliable wind power.

Consequently, any plan for ‘renewables’ at Bryn Rhudd is a reminder that wind turbines, fields of solar panels, are all about making money. Nothing to do with the environment whatsoever.

♦ end ♦

© Royston Jones 2025

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Jonathan F Dean
Jonathan F Dean

Re the fact sheet

Gwyddelwern BESS no longer has a grid connection at Gwyddelwern, but NP SPV31 Ltd does

Moelfre Energy Park Ltd is no longer onshore wind in the TEC Register but is now storage (BESS) connecting to Bodelwyddan

Jonathan F Dean

Consequently, any plan for ‘renewables’ at Bryn Rhudd is a reminder that wind turbines, fields of solar panels, are all about making money. Nothing to do with the environment whatsoever.”

Of course they are, these are commercial companies responsible to their shareholders (legally so in the case of plc’s). It has been such for all electricity generation since the industry was privatised by Maggie. No electricity generator of any type is providing a public service

It is the government that provides the public service by enacting policies and commercial frameworks for service provision

Commercial companies are always going to do what companies do, make money for themselves from others, be they corner shops, supermarkets, nuclear power stations or wind farms. That’s capitalism, and generally, we love it

In my years in the oil industry, never once did we consider we were providing a public service by making gas available for central heating, or to generate electricity for hospitals, or petrol for ambulances, it was all about making money. The wind and solar companies are no different

Dafis

No argument with good old capitalism with a diverse mix of companies competing for market share. We do not have that today despite what their advocates may bleat at length. The supply chain for domestic energy is tucked up by an oligopolistic sham underpinned by government collusion. These corporates do not tolerate market capitalism as they would have to work too hard for their money. That’s the way most governments like it.

Liz

Spot on very succinctly put…but demand and supply and we are entering an era due to our reliance on the blessed internet where we cannot meet demand…and dont forget factory production, logistics, and farming…cooling, refrigeration.

Jonathan F Dean

Who says we cannot meet demand?

Nicola Lund

Fascinating, as always. And what a factsheet! So much time and effort has clearly been invested on your part.
Do you ever badger your MSs with this information (just for the hell of it; we know how ineffectual they are) to see how they respond?

Jonathan F Dean

These are the places where most new generation will connect to the transmission system

image
Peter Haigh

I like your fact sheet. It might help to add columns for projects that hold TEC that are assigned to those companies and their proposed connection point based on the TEC register (often inaccurate or out of date but still).

If you send me the spreadsheet I’ll have a go at it. I have worked with the document before and know its weirdnesses.

Jonathan F Dean

Bryn Glas Energy Park is in the TEC at 159 MW and will connect to Pont Abraham AKA Proposed Ferryside AKA South Wales Connection Node C at Llandyfaelog, so I’m guessing via either Tywi-Usk or Tywi-Teifi

David Smith

Lots of ‘quickies’ lately here – seems to be plenty of lead in Old Jac’s pencil (a metaphor for your prolific output with the written word, of course).

David Smith

You are the investigative journalist Wales needs, but not what we’ve earned unfortunately. Citizen journalism of your sort will be increasingly important as years go by undoubtedly, as established orders are increasingly rattled here and further afield. Long may you continue!

Jonathan Dean

In case you haven’t seen it

https://nation.cymru/news/wales-does-not-need-onshore-wind-to-meet-carbon-reduction-targets/

I’ll stick the source data on an email later so you can cross check

Jonathan F Dean

Everyone has some type of bias!

For the past 40 years (possibly more) we have been trying to free ourselves from the clutches of the petro-states, if only partially, so if not for climate change offshore wind is still a good thing

Dafis

Don’t forget marine turbines. Clusters kept away from busy sea traffic lanes and sized to reduce risk to fish and other marine species.

Jonathan F Dean

Tidal flow schemes would be wonderful but we are still at the pilot stage and unlikely to have anything sizeable for years, while offshore wind is keeping the lights on right now

Wynne

Jac. You refer to remote sites with no decent access roads. In my view this will become a big issue on all windfarm sites. I am involved in ongoing correspondence on this subject with Pennant Walters Ltd and PEDW. Awaiting reply to my letter dated 26 January. Copy below. Not sure if the images in Annex 1 of my letter will be displayed properly on your blog.

Trecelyn Wind Farm
Pennant Walters Ltd
The Granary,
Forge Road,
Bassaleg,
Newport,
NP10 8AT

My Ref: NCC/WJ/212/01
Your Ref: CAS-02114-J9X4S6
Date: 26 January 2025

Dear Project Team

Subject: Pennant Walters Trecelyn wind farm

I write to enquire whether you are now in a position to respond to my enquiry dated 13 January 2025 and confirm that legal notice has been served on affected third party landowners?

An abstract from Trecelyn Wind Farm Access Study is reproduced in Annex 1 below. From the information provided am I correct in assuming that:

  1.  In addition to the DNS planning application to be determined by the minister, separate planning applications to the Local Planning Authority will also be required with regard to the removal of walls and hedges to enable materials to be transported to your development site.
  2. A commuted sum payment made to Local Highway Authority to cover the future additional cost of maintaining a widened public highway network. 
  3. The surface of a widened public highway network will be “vested” in the Local Highway Authority with Pennant Walters Ltd retaining freehold title to the land beneath the surface of the widened public highway following legal conveyance process. 

I look forward to receiving clarification to enable me to make further representations to PEDW before 10 February 2025: the end date for public representations. Thank you.

Yours sincerely

Annex 1

Abstract from Trecelyn Wind Farm Access Study

Wynne

Second attempt. Now attached as an image.

JwUkf4ig0vyxguga
Liz

Hi Wynne…I keep ranting on so apologies…I work in IT and in business development for my clients. One of my clients last year delivered a paper on Climate change at a conference in Switzerland. He is a prof of physics and and engineer and his company designs software that will measure flow down to micro molecular levels..so thats flow of gas, elec, water, oil..beer!! lol…you name it…..so his software has applications that can be used globally. His rant for the last x number of years is…they can say they can put these turbines up etc but they cant link into the National Grid and he laughs…because to put the power cables in will cost billions nationwide…hence Starmers new stance of Nuke!! lol…but he knew that as did Milliband and its all a con to get the greens on board. I spend whatever opp;ortunity I have and can…to try to get ppl to understand that Green is a dream because of our total relyance on the internet and everything we use it for is wrapped around our daily lives…me sitting here a small minute mico example…but all this data stored on servers takes energy…so much demand we cannot meet…so ask…how is the power getting to these sites…thats the question thats never never asked…I am dislexic btw so excuse spelling…used to care but dont any more…lol…so these scammers are getting on the green cash flow band wagon and we know it…but no one cares these days as its the must have it now generation who have never known a life with out everything on demand…

Jonathan F Dean

This is why we need regional wholesale electricity pricing, and then all the data centres will be in Scotland

If you look at the DESNZ public attitudes tracker you’ll see that the U.K. populous isn’t keen on nuclear. But the government want it (to subsidise the nuclear subs). So onshore wind is used to get people begging for nuclear

Liz

Back to nuclear…lol…ppl arent keen on nuclear for obvious reasons…what do you do with the waste…into space..haha…but as I keep ranting..ppl have choices…get your mangle out…stop using your mobile…back to live tv and to bed by 11pm..

Liz

Most of the UK population are only interested in one thing…getting supply to their houses and businesses cheaply as possible. The Greens think they can save the planet and so Govts pander to their wishes in order to get elected and stay elected. Simple.

Dafis

That last sentence says it all :

any plan for ‘renewables’ at Bryn Rhudd is a reminder that wind turbines, fields of solar panels, are all about making money. Nothing to do with the environment whatsoever.

Like pigs at a trough the landgrabbing swindlers are rushing in creating a fake gold rush where loadsamoney will be made right through the chain simply because prices are guaranteed and us the consumers are the suckers who end up paying over the odds for this folly.

Who will pay for clearing up the mess when all this is clapped out in 15-20-25 years ? People are running around like headless chickens looking for ways to repurpose turbine blades at the end of their working life Soon we will be awash with modern art made out of blades and some twat will want us to subsidise the artist/sculptor !. The real environmental damage will be left to nature to take its course as no human intervention can replicate that which took tens of thousands of years to create.

Jonathan Dean

Blades can, apparently, be incinerated in waste to energy plants, but I’m still waiting for confirmation that the promised plant in Scotland is being built. The wind industry has lobbied for years to get landfilling of blades banned, which is happening in the EU, as that would justify investing in plant

Dafis

Haven’t read up on disposal of scrap blades for a long time. As I recall there were some serious issues with a) cutting the blades to a manageable size as the composite materials were very hard, not likely to be done on site, and b) of probably greater significance that it would take very high temperatures to incinerate them properly which suggests that energy inputs might exceed any energy outputs.

No doubt these engineering problems could be overcome in due course but the environmental damage caused by the choice of sites would be far longer term given the need for access roads and the other infrastructure that just doesn’t exist in places like Yr Elenydd.

Liz

Atm they are just dumped, piled high…in the US…google it and you will see the so called Grave yards…but it would appear that they are made of non recyclable material…cost!!..so those who spout Green Save our Planet are in another reality as it shows its all about the money…but thats what drives humanity…

Jonathan F Dean

The US landfills grass, leaves and cardboard, so not exactly a good place to look for sustainable practices

Liz

this is from 2020…but world wide they are basically just dumped…but in the UK we have a slight problem…space…the US has plenty…https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-51325101

Jonathan F Dean

Which is why the wind industry has been lobbying to have landfill banned, but the U.K. government hasn’t got round to it yet. The EU has

Liz

Cost.

Annie Zak

I am deeply saddened by the lack of public interest in saving this wonderful landscape and protecting it’s precious water resource. In the light of the contamination of public and private water supplies when Whitelee Windfarm, Scotland was being constructed https://committees.parliament.uk/writtenevidence/68083/html/ (point 6) do you think anyone in the Welsh Government has considered the cumulative effect of building all these wind farms and the ramifications it could have on the water quality of our rivers, bore holes, wells and the public drinking water Wales uses and exports to England. Or will we again hear “Decision makers must prioritise the Welsh Government’s renewable energy targets as these goals are more important than any possible negative impacts”?

Liz

its interesting how Starmer is now going Nuke baby Nuk and Milliband is going back on resign lol…as he threatened in 2009 over Heathrow. Starmer did mutter something as I have said before he was elected that the Nat Grid is not fit for purpose and Octopus Energy has recently re iterated this…then Starmer went quiet and it was never mentioned again and now here we are with N Sea Oil and Gas…because we need to much electricity…to power our internet hungry society…I know this is a Wgov issue..lol..but the Wgov will just carry on dishing out the dosh…our dosh…not interested in the long term…only the now…roll on 26 but thats a dream away.

Dafis

Millibandwidth doesn’t know his arse from a hole in the ground. He embraced “green” cos it’s fashionable see, and he’ll still wander off to some greenhouse gas conference in Rio by top class jet without batting an eyelid. Man is a complete and utter imbecile given power over a c.£28billion budget that will no doubt overrun by the time he’s finished feckin’ about with it. Pardon my choice language but he really makes my piss boil.

Liz

Priceless..lol..but true..but the big issue here is that these scam turbine and solar sites cant be linked into the N Grid..thats a fact..but no one is asking that question even in planning..as they all jump on the cash for turbines and green energy band wagon..but this lot were all voted in by ppl who are all easily led and believe it all

Jonathan F Dean

This wind farm already has a grid connection contract

Liz

So…does that mean that there is a contract in place pending LINKUP? or is the connection already there? anyone can have a contract…Trecwn in Fishguard had a contract but no link..and was after many thousands of pounds spend by the Wgov deemed not worth the money due to the fact that the NGrid system in that area could only service Fishguard and so for the money it would take to set it all up it would never be worth the money…

Jonathan F Dean

Anyone cannot have a connection contract

The physical connection will be either part of the planning consent, or a separate but linked planning consent

However, getting the connection contract is the start

Liz

Lol…Yes thats what I said…anyone can have a contract implimenting the link is the main issue…

Jonathan F Dean

Who are the WG “dishing out the dosh” to?

All the recent noise about nuclear is just a distraction … but from what? Possibly the c**k up at Sizewell has been suggested

Liz

Its not a distraction because the reality is we need Nuclear and gas and oil from the N Sea because as I keep spouting…everything is run by the internet. Banking,Police, Education, NHS, Logistics, Retail, Customs and local Govt, telecoms, entertainment streaming and all the computer screens that are active in our NHS and diagnostic equipment and even our washing machines are wifi as is our heating and Alexa and on and on it goes and all this has to be stored on servers in data storage centres and has to be driven and run and cooled by electricity…so if we dont go Nuclea we are going to be screwed…they are NOT talking the likes of Sizewell but the smaller nuclear reactors which are easier to install but still you have to deal with the contaminated waste and where do you put it…same old.!!…so to answer your question the welsh govt are dishing out the dosh by way of grants to start up clean energy companies as Jac has said…without any foundation to support that these turbines can even be linked into the grid. If there is no access to the grid in situ as Octopus Energy has stated that in Norfolk its going to take decades…and that is a point that no one seems to “get”…you can have the turbines wizzing around…sure…but no output if you cant plug em in!! lol…

Jonathan F Dean

I was referring to the newspaper articles about how Wylfa was cancelled because of the Welsh language

Liz

Twaddle lol…it was cancelled by the Japanese Company going to build it because of the return the UK Govt was going to give them on energy produced…so it wasnt worth Hitachi doing it…they get paid per unit of elec produced woops…quote = Hitachi pulled out of the Wylfa nuclear power project in Wales because they were unable to reach a funding agreement with the UK government, citing rising costs and a worsened investment environment due to the impact of COVID-19, leading them to suspend the project in January 2019 and eventually withdraw completely in September 2020; this decision was a major blow to the region as the project had the potential to create thousands of jobs

Liz

I think ppl dont know…and have more pressing stuff to worry about.

Jonathan F Dean

It’s not just people who don’t know …

I challenged the DESNZ Public Attitudes Tracker, as apparently the U.K. public are happy to live near wind farms!

I got a copy of the questions asked in the survey, and the size of turbine and proximity to housing isn’t mentioned in the question

I quizzed the DESNZ team who told me they were confident the public know that a wind turbine looked like

I pointed out that all the turbines I see from home are 50 m high, whereas there are very few planning applications below 200 m, but these are not yet built, so the public can not have seen them

I’m waiting to see if any qualifying statements are introduced to the survey

Liz

A local community project put one up in Fishguard about 12 years ago. At least you were able to see which direction the wind was coming in…They are not that noisy…surprisingly…not as noisy in comparrison with the horrible high pitched hum you get with external heat pumps. When I was in Devon I drove past one that was very near the road with a house right next to it and stopped to listen..so!!…you cant have it all…and as I said and keep ranting on about…ppl dont understand how much electricity we use just for me to sit here and type out my rant in our internet dependent society…so unless you want to go back to the dark ages and wash your laundry by hand and have the black screen of death on your tv and computers at 10pm and say goodbye to the NHS diagnostic systems…then fine…but I dont think that there are many 20 somethings today who would accept not being able to be permanently plugged into their mobiles!!..lol…its called choice!

Jonathan F Dean

It certainly does, but neither of those two extremes are anywhere near reality

80% of the U.K. population lives in towns and cities so will have seen turbines some years ago, in the distance, on holiday, and not thought about them since

Jonathan F Dean

You blame the companies though, when they are just doing what companies do.

Jonathan F Dean

What would the answers be if not wind and solar? Carbon capture?

Liz

Well maybe the best thing for the farmers who are now going to be broke due to IHT is to sell them to turbine and solar generating companies…

Dafis

That sounds like Labour governments’ vision in London and Cardiff. It must be resisted and rejected.

Liz

Well they were and it still maybe in the pipe line…no link up of course..lol…to put a huge wind turbine system off the Pembrokeshire Coast…but its not happened yet…lol…There are quite a few 100 off the N Wales coast at Colwyn Bay to Mostyn…what they actually produce I dont know…but the prob is…no wind no power…

Jonathan F Dean

Read the “Beyond 2030: The Celtic Sea” report from NESO.

Liz

1500 – 1600 saw drought, flood, famine and freezing temperatures across Europe and the Thames froze. Fires in Europe so…there is nothing really new…Climate isnt constant it changes for various reasons…The Dark Ages were most likely called Dark because for quite a few years it was…and people died of starvation…so…yes, there is an element of what we are doing that is speeding things up…maybe…but chopping down the rain forrests isnt going to help as we plunder the planet so that we can eat Brazillian Beef…