Ash Tree New

Ash Tree Solar Park

The Ash Tree Effect

The amount of renewable energy (in MWhrs) annually

*Please note that calculations may be adjusted to ensure maximum accuracy

CO2
3,721
Tonnes CO2 emissions avoided
House
4,201
Avg. domestic households served each year
Land
22.42
Approx. hectares of land protected by the solar park
Ash Tree

Ash Tree Solar Park

British Solar Renewables (BSR Energy) is bringing forward proposals for a new solar development on Land at Leamington Road, Princethorpe. The 22.42 -hectare site is located 1.1 km to the west of the centre of Princethorpe, Rugby. The proposals represent an opportunity to boost green energy generation in Rugby.

Given the current cost of living crisis, which includes soaring energy prices and concerns around energy security, providing locally sourced clean, green, and reliable energy production is more vital than ever. Additionally, Rugby Borough Council declared a climate emergency in 2019 and the central Government has set out ambitious targets to ensure the United Kingdom is net zero by 2050. In order to meet this target and to address the climate emergency, the shift away from polluting fossil fuel sources towards green energy production options, such as solar developments, is needed urgently.


BSR Energy is passionate about playing its part to help the UK make the change towards renewable sources. We have all seen first-hand last summer the impacts that climate change is having, from the hottest day on record being recorded, to official drought declarations. The time to take action and mitigate against any further damage to our planet is now.

BSR’s proposals would deliver a solar development with an export capacity of up to 16.8MW. This energy would be fed directly into the grid via an onsite point of connection.

See webpage - https://www.bsr-ashtree.co.uk/


Stat References

Based on an annual average domestic consumption per household (Great Britain) of 3,799 kWh. Source BEIS, Regional and Local authority electricity consumption statics 2018.

Based on 'Emissions associated with the generation of electricity at a power station (Electricity generation factors do not include transmission and distribution). Source BEIS, Greenhouse gas reporting: conversion factors 2020.