Bradford schools set to go solar

BusinessGreen staff
clock

Council to issue up to 40 loans and technical support to help curb carbon emissions and energy bills

Bradford Council has become the first local authority in the UK to back plans for its schools to run on solar power, as it emerged that nationally just five schools have installed renewables that qualify for feed-in tariff incentives in the past year.

The council has passed a motion led by the Green Party to support Friends of the Earth Run on Sun campaign, which will result in it providing technical and financial suport to schools wishing to install solar photovoltaics.

Under its solar schools programme Bradford Council has agreed to award loans to up 40 schools in the city to install photovoltaic arrays on their sites. Bradford Green Councillor Kevin Warnes said the Council would also be providing technical support to schools that wanted to go down the solar power route.

"As the fourth largest local authority in England and Wales, we are in a great position to promote clean energy and make it easier for our 200 schools to invest in solar power," he said.

"We also have the expertise that is required to raise awareness of the financial, practical and environmental benefits of our schools being powered by the sun. So I welcome this important milestone in the sustainable energy revolution that is beginning to unfold across our district."

The news came as new figures released by the government yesterday revealed that five schools have been granted preliminary accreditation for the feed-in tariff since July last year, only four of which have been granted full accreditation.

Currently, schools can take out loans to invest in solar power through their local authority only if that local authority has a solar schools scheme in place. The government recently launched a push to encourage more schools to install solar, but Friends of the Earth has argued the campaign will only prove successful if rules are relaxed to allow more schools to take out loans to fund solar arrays.

In related news, renewable energy firm Eco2Solar has won a £500,000 contract to install solar PV on 11 new housing schemes across Birmingham.

All of the schemes are for Birmingham Municipal Housing Trust and will see Kidderminster-based Eco2Solar install 1.5kWp six-panel solar panel energy systems on 230 new homes.

Once complete, the panels are expected to produce more than 300,000kWh of power energy per year, which will be used to lower homeowners' bills and curb emissions.

More on Solar

Half of Aldi's UK stores expected to feature solar panels by end of 2026

Half of Aldi's UK stores expected to feature solar panels by end of 2026

Britain's fourth largest supermarket chain is planning to install solar panels at a further 62 of its UK stores this year

Stuart Stone
clock 10 April 2026 • 1 min read
'Basking in a solar surge': UK smashes solar generation record two days in a row

'Basking in a solar surge': UK smashes solar generation record two days in a row

Britain's solar farms generated a record 14.4GW of electricity during one period this week, according to the National Energy System Operator (NESO)

clock 09 April 2026 • 3 min read
Government greenlights 'UK's largest' solar power project in Lincolnshire

Government greenlights 'UK's largest' solar power project in Lincolnshire

DESNZ touts solar as 'one of the cheapest forms of power available' in the UK as it approves plans for Springwell Solar Farm

Michael Holder
clock 08 April 2026 • 3 min read