Farmers ‘vindicated’ after judge’s ruling on pylon firm accessing land

by | Jul 6, 2026 | Climate Change

David Griffin23 minutes agoA firm planning major new pylon routes through Wales needs to better inform residents before accessing their land, a judge has ruled.Groups representing more than 500 landowners took Green Gen Cymru to court, claiming they were left “frightened and intimidated” by company agents turning up on their farms.A judge said the company should do more to give landowners proper notice and criticised its “failure to grapple” with the risk of spreading livestock diseases from farm to farm.Green Gen said it was “committed to carrying out our work responsibly” to “deliver a secure and resilient energy network for Wales”. Lawyers acting on the landowners’ behalf said they had been “vindicated”.Green GEN CymruGreen Gen, owned by parent company Bute Energy, hopes to build three major electricity pylon routes connecting planned onshore windfarms in mid and west Wales with the wider grid network.Proposals affect parts of Carmarthenshire, Ceredigion and Powys – with one of the routes stretching across the Welsh border into Shropshire.Supporters say Wales’ electricity grid is not fit for purpose, holding back renewable energy schemes and the roll-out of low carbon technologies such as electric cars and heat pumps.The company has statutory powers to access land due to its work on what would be nationally significant energy infrastructure.But it has found itself in a dispute with hundreds of farmers and landowners, who have accused its agents of acting in a heavy-handed way.Green Gen Cymru will now have to pay 60% of the claimant’s costs, amounting to £21,000 alongside their own legal fees.Hundreds of farmers challenge pylons firm which ‘frightened and intimidated’ communities21 AprilPylon plans could spark mass social unrest – Plaid4 April 2025In a judgement issued on Monday, High Court Judge Mr Justice Kimblin concluded there was evidence the company had “in some instances” served notices to access land “with insufficient regard to the requirement to give proper notice and to enter land at reasonable times”.A notice issued to the lead claimant in the case, Natalie Barstow, was “unduly broad and lacking in particularity”, he said.However he also found no action was taken under that notice “other than a minor and inadvertent entry” onto her land in July 2025, and refused to quash legal notices issued by the company for accessing land. Mr Justice Kimblin said developers must give proper notice to enter and survey private land, allowing landowners time to prepare, and could not rely on notices months or years after they were given.This was “taking all of the benefit of the access and taking none of the burden of properly thinking about what is reasonable in the circumstances”, he said.David GriffinKimblin said Green Gen Cymru had failed to “grapple with the risks of transmission of [bovine] TB” when entering private land – but found the company had not breached environmental law.He noted the company had made improvements in response to the landowners’ concerns, with new policies on survey access, protected species and habitats and vulnerable people.It had also carried out training to ensure “consistent implementation”, it was heard, and statutory notices had been improved to give clearer advance notice, invite landowners to share site-specific issues and direct recipients to “biosecurity guidance”.Natalie Barstow, the lead claimant who runs a farm and campsite near Builth Wells, Powys, said she f …

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