Ed Miliband faces High Court battle over one of UK's largest solar farms as residents warn it will 'destroy their countryside'
Ed Miliband faces a High Court battle over plans to build a vast solar farm that residents have warned will destroy the countryside.
By PATRICK HARRINGTON
Published: 20:54 GMT, 3 January 2026 | Updated: 21:08 GMT, 3 January 2026
Ed Miliband faces a High Court battle over plans to build a vast solar farm that residents have warned will destroy the countryside.
Helios Solar Farm, near Selby, North Yorkshire, was given the greenlight by the Energy Secretary last month, and campaigners are furiously fundraising to bring a legal challenge against it.
If completed, the project would be one of the largest of its kind in the UK, covering 1175 hectares of agricultural land west of the village of Camblesforth and producing 190MW of power.
Locals argue they have already suffered enough at the hands of recent green projects, and have raised serious concerns about the countryside being lost to industrialisation.
Campaign group Halt (Halt All Large Transmission/Solar Farms) took up their cause after receiving legal advice that there were 'serious and arguable flaws' in the planning decision.
The group is now scrambling to raise the funds to bring the case to the High Court by the deadline, which is six weeks on from Mr Miliband's December 3 approval.
Around half of the £15,000 required to launch the challenge has already been pledged, and the group believes it will be in a position to submit the review within days.
All contributions will be refunded if the threshold is not met, and further funds would be needed if the review proceeded to court.
Energy Secretary Ed Miliband approved plans last month for a vast new solar farm in North Yorkshire. Pictured: Miliband visits a solar farm in Retford, Nottinghamshire, in 2024
If completed, the project would be one of the largest of its kind in the UK. Pictured: File image of a solar farm near bath in October 2025
If the money is raised, Halt's legal challenge will focus on questioning whether rules regarding the cumulative impact of energy infrastructure were followed in the plans.
Residents and community leaders have claimed the Selby area is being unfairly targeted for green energy projects - with a concurrent campaign fighting another large project, Light Valley Solar, to the west of the town.
Bryan Ward, 40, who owns the nearby 17th-century wedding venue Camblesforth Hall with his wife, pointed out that locals had already suffered disruption from two separate 50MW solar sites being built to the north and the south of the village.
He told The Telegraph: 'We have had legal advice on this from a solicitor, and we don’t think that they have reviewed the cumulative impact of the project at all.'
Mr Ward said the development would knock out 'prime agricultural land' that is home to 'deer, barn owls, bats, loads of birds of prey' and that provides recreation for horse riders and ramblers.