THE tiny parish of Helland in Cornwall has invited councillors from 38 surrounding parishes to discuss the impact, on the entire region, of a proposed “industrial-scale” wind farm at Helland Barton Farm.

Concerned residents say it now faces a scheme for seven 100-metre turbines, each of which will be twice the height of Nelson’s Column in London.

Orlando Kimber, chair of Helland Parish Council, said: “Whilst renewables may be highly preferable to burning fossil fuels for energy, the delivery of any major building project needs careful scrutiny. Once a business installs industrial megastructures on prime agricultural fields, the site can never return to productive farmland.”

WMW Consultants Ltd applied for an Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) scoping opinion on behalf of applicant Mark Quinn in March 2025 ahead of a full planning application, which has yet to be submitted.

It is proposed to install a wind farm on the 175-hectare site. The maximum tip height is expected to be around 115 metres (377ft). The exact specification and number of turbines will be determined at the planning application stage, although locals were shown plans in August last year which featured seven turbines on a map of the site.

A map showing the location of the seven turbines on the site in Helland (Picture: Helland Parish Council)
A map showing the location of the seven turbines on the site in Helland (Picture: Helland Parish Council) ( )

The proposal comes at a time when the government has issued a new Land Use Framework (March 2026). This recommends putting at least 420,000 acres under control for solar, wind and housing. As there is no ‘brownfield-first’ policy for new builds, this makes it increasingly likely that every parish will face the loss of open green spaces in the near future, says Helland’s parish chair.

“Every parish north and south of Helland will be affected and the visual impact on the landscape will be huge,” added Cllr Kimber.

Following a meeting in March last year, neighbouring Blisland Parish Council resolved to represent the concern felt within the parish about the “significant and widespread environmental impact that a sizeable wind farm will have in this location”.

Parish clerk Maria Roper wrote to Cornwall Council’s planning department, saying: “In particular it seems likely that the proposal will have a significant visual impact on, and directly affect the setting of, the Cornish National Landscape and will become an alien visual presence in the CNL that will be visible over long distances and from many different locations remote from the site.

“The impact of red ‘hazard and warning lights’ affixed to the turbines will significantly impact on the Dark Skies Area. If a formal application for this wind farm is forthcoming the parish council asks that every effort is made in the design process to minimise and mitigate these adverse effects.”

The Ministry of Defence (MOD) also has concerns “due to insufficient information being provided to enable MOD to carry out assessments to determine the impacts of the development. Development of the type proposed may impact on aviation safety and the operation and capability of defence sites and assets”.

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The council says that due to the hall’s capacity, the meeting will be restricted to councillors who have been personally invited.