£2million investment proposed on solar panels at schools

Published
Gloucestershire County Council is set to invest £2million on installing solar panels at schools in the county.

The council has committed to creating a carbon neutral county by 2045, as well as reducing emissions by 80 per cent by 2030. Investing in low carbon technology such as solar panels will help meet these targets.

A report going to cabinet on Wednesday 24 July says the programme of work has the potential to reduce over 500 tonnes of CO2 each year.

A pilot scheme is currently in place at six of the council’s maintained schools – Nailsworth CofE Primary, Harewood Junior in Tuffley, St John’s Primary in Cheltenham, Ashchurch Primary in Tewkesbury, Stow-on-the-Wold Primary and Woolaston Primary in Lydney. This is to establish the costs of installation and will enable measures to be put in place to ensure an efficient roll-out of the project at other selected maintained schools.

Each of the council’s maintained schools will be assessed to determine their suitability for inclusion in the programme of works. The county council aims to install solar panels on the maximum number of schools possible that meet the criteria and it is anticipated that 85 out of 100 maintained schools will be suitable.

The panels would generate average estimated annual savings of £4,360 per school and they would be expected to last over 20 years, subject to maintenance.

The project will see the panels installed in tranches to manage the process and is due to take place from October 2024 to March 2027.

Cabinet is being recommended to approve the release of up to £2million from the budget to provide solar panels on selected maintained schools’ premises. If approved, a procurement process would follow to arrange contracts for the purchase and installation of the panels.

Cllr Lynden Stowe, cabinet member for finance and change at Gloucestershire County Council, said: “We’re committed to meeting our climate targets and this proposal will help by decreasing carbon emissions at schools. Schools have been very receptive to the plans, which will help them generate savings by reducing their energy bills.

“I hope the measures will encourage more people to follow suit and install solar panels on their homes and businesses to reduce their carbon footprint.”

You can read the full cabinet report here.