SECTORS

Renewables

What this sector is trying to do

The renewables pipeline — solar, wind, battery storage, EV infrastructure has grown faster than the planning system’s ability to set coherent policy for it. Clients range from large energy developers promoting utility-scale projects to landowners navigating the first agricultural solar application on their ground. Each scheme type arrives with a different profile of transport, drainage and infrastructure challenge, and with local planning authorities whose familiarity with the evidence requirements varies widely.

The recurring constraint

For ground-mounted solar, the drainage question is frequently the determining one. National flood maps are built at scales that cannot reflect site-specific topography. Environment Agency objections based on those maps have become predictable. The methodology applied at Langford Farm in Mid Devon — making the case for significantly reduced flood risk on a site the national map had designated Flood Zone 3, where the EA had formally objected — is a tested approach, not a one-off result. Construction transport is the other recurring constraint: abnormal load routes, construction traffic management, pre-commencement highway surveys.

Where accumulated knowledge matters

The cross-sector learning is most direct between renewables and residential. The flood risk arguments are the same methodology applied to different site typologies. The construction transport planning draws on authority relationships built through residential and commercial s278 work over many years. What changes between sectors is the planning context and the client’s risk appetite. The thinking that reads a flood fingerprint on a solar farm is the same thinking that reads it on a housing allocation.

Helping to deliver a green future on solid engineering principles

We are fortunate to be working with some of the most recognisable renewable energy brands in the market. They have placed their trust in us time after time on projects across the country. Our latest projects include:

Nationally, BP

public electric vehicle charging car parks

Layne’s Wood, Highleadon, Gloucestershire

130ha Solar PV

Elwy Solar Farm, Denbighshire

119ha Solar PV

Cotmoor Solar Farm, Southwell, Nottinghamshire

108ha Solar PV

Lawrence Weston Community Scheme, Avonmouth, Bristol

single wind turbine

Calibro’s logical approach to seeing constraints as an opportunity assists in achieving a desirable solution that is communicated clearly and robustly to ensure the projects are driven forward successfully.

Andy Cattermole
Redrow Homes PLC
Senior Planning Manager

Where we work

We work across residential, commercial, health, education, infrastructure, renewables, retail and leisure, and wherever work takes us beyond that list. Every project builds on an established body of knowledge: how to use the planning system to a client’s advantage, what creates places that hold their value, and where early decisions protect against risk and leave a legacy that matters beyond completion.

Those learnings cross every sector boundary. What we take from a residential scheme shapes how we approach a commercial one. What we learn in one planning authority informs how we navigate the next. That accumulated intelligence is what you’re drawing on, whatever the brief.

The sector shifts. The thinking doesn’t.