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Positive Energy Solutions

Learn about solar PV output, roof shading, planning checks, grants, battery storage and commercial solar options across North East Derbyshire.

Solar Panels North East Derbyshire: The Essential Guide

North East Derbyshire is a varied district for solar panels. It includes larger settlements such as Dronfield, Clay Cross, Eckington and Killamarsh, village-edge homes, former mining communities, rural properties, schools, supermarkets, workshops, industrial sites, farms, conservation-sensitive buildings and larger land-based solar proposals.

That variety matters. A home in Wingerworth, Dronfield or Tupton may need a different solar assessment from a school roof in Danesmoor, a supermarket roof in Dronfield, a commercial workshop at Corbriggs, a private-wire solar proposal near Holmewood, or a larger solar and battery storage scheme near Temple Normanton.

For homeowners, landlords, schools, farms and businesses in North East Derbyshire, the question is not simply “does solar work here?” Solar panels can generate electricity from daylight, not just direct sunshine. The more useful questions are whether your roof or land has enough usable space, whether shading or roof structure could affect output, whether coal mining legacy or countryside policy needs checking, whether planning approval or prior approval applies, and whether battery storage would help you use more of your own solar electricity.

Positive Energy Solutions is a family-run solar company based in Derbyshire. We help homeowners and businesses understand whether solar panels, Solar PV, battery storage or commercial solar could be right for their property, with clear advice and no hard sell.

If you are comparing options across the wider county, you can also visit our main page for solar panels in Derbyshire.

Want to know if your North East Derbyshire property is suitable for solar?

Start with our free remote solar survey. You can pinpoint your exact roof online, and our Derbyshire-based team will take a look before giving you honest, no-pressure advice.

Start Your Free Remote Solar Survey
Solar Panels North East Derbyshire PVGIS output estimate

Do Solar Panels Work Well in North East Derbyshire?

Yes, solar panels can work well in North East Derbyshire, provided the property is suitable. According to the Energy Saving Trust, solar panels generate electricity from sunlight and can still work on cloudy days. They usually perform best on an unshaded, south-facing roof, although east and west-facing roofs can also be worth considering.

This matters locally because North East Derbyshire is not one single type of solar area. Dronfield has a strong suburban and commercial roof angle. Clay Cross, North Wingfield, Grassmoor, Holmewood, Pilsley, Stonebroom and Tupton include many homes and buildings where former coalfield and ground-condition notes can be relevant. Ashover, Barlow, Shirland, Holymoorside and Unstone bring more rural, village and landscape considerations.

A standard domestic roof in Dronfield, Eckington, Killamarsh or Wingerworth may be relatively straightforward to assess. A heritage-sensitive building, a school roof, a supermarket roof, a commercial building in a countryside setting, or a larger ground-mounted solar scheme needs a more careful review of design, visual impact, landscape, biodiversity, grid connection and planning route.

How Much Electricity Could Solar Panels Generate in North East Derbyshire?

1,011 kWh Estimated annual output from a suitable 1kWp solar PV system.
4,044 kWh Approximate annual output from a typical 4kWp domestic solar PV system.

A representative PVGIS estimate for a suitable North East Derbyshire roof suggests that a 1kWp solar PV system could generate around 1,011 kWh per year. Based on that estimate, a typical 4kWp domestic solar PV system could produce around 4,044 kWh per year.

This estimate is based on a suitable south-facing roof with a 35° pitch, crystalline silicon panels, 14% system losses and calculated horizon shading. It should be treated as a useful guide, not a guarantee. Actual output will depend on the property, roof orientation, pitch, shading, roof condition, panel layout, inverter choice, system design and how electricity is used in the home, school, farm or business.

In North East Derbyshire, the final design can vary significantly by property. Chimneys, dormers, neighbouring buildings, mature trees, rooflights, commercial roof structures, ground levels and surrounding landscape can all affect solar performance. A remote survey can help identify obvious constraints before any recommendation is made.

You can learn more about how PVGIS estimates solar radiation and PV system performance through the European Commission PVGIS tool.

Why North East Derbyshire Needs a Property-Specific Solar Assessment

North East Derbyshire needs a property-specific view because the district includes several different solar settings. Around Dronfield, Eckington, Killamarsh and Wingerworth, the main considerations may be roof direction, roof space, chimneys, neighbouring homes, roof condition and household electricity use. Around Clay Cross, Holmewood, North Wingfield, Pilsley, Grassmoor, Stonebroom and Tupton, some planning decisions also show coal mining legacy notes being relevant to development.

In rural and village areas such as Ashover, Barlow, Calow, Holymoorside, Renishaw, Shirland and Unstone, solar design may need to consider landscape character, conservation settings, older buildings, farm structures, access, ecology and how visible the panels are from surrounding roads or neighbouring properties.

Commercial and non-domestic buildings add another layer. A supermarket roof in Dronfield, a school roof in Danesmoor, a commercial workshop at Corbriggs or a private-wire solar development near Holmewood will need more than a simple domestic roof check. Roof structure, fire access, inverter location, glare, grid connection, daytime energy demand and planning route all matter.

A good solar assessment for a North East Derbyshire property should look at:
  • Roof direction and pitch
  • Available roof, garage, outbuilding, school or commercial roof space
  • Shading from trees, chimneys, dormers, rooflights or neighbouring buildings
  • Roof age, condition and structure
  • Whether coal mining legacy or ground stability notes may be relevant
  • Whether the property is in a conservation-sensitive, listed-building or countryside setting
  • Whether a domestic, school, commercial, agricultural or land-based system is being considered
  • Whether battery storage would help you use more of your own solar electricity
  • How much electricity the property uses during the day and evening

In some cases, a North East Derbyshire roof may be very suitable for solar. In others, shading, roof condition, former mining legacy, planning constraints, heritage sensitivity, landscape impact or commercial roof complexity may mean a different design is needed, or that solar is not the right option.

Do You Need Planning Permission for Solar Panels in North East Derbyshire?

Many domestic roof-mounted solar panel installations in England may fall under permitted development rights, but this depends on the property and the exact installation. The Planning Portal explains the main national rules for solar equipment on houses and blocks of flats, including requirements around appearance, siting and permitted development limitations.

For commercial and non-domestic buildings, the rules are different. The Planning Portal guidance for non-domestic solar panels explains that roof-mounted commercial systems may need to meet specific conditions, and some proposals may need prior approval.

North East Derbyshire needs careful planning checks in some cases. Local examples show that domestic roof solar, garage roof solar, school roof solar, supermarket roof solar and commercial roof solar can all be considered locally, but countryside policy, coal mining legacy, heritage setting, landscape screening, biodiversity and EIA screening can also become relevant depending on the proposal.

This does not mean solar panels are unsuitable in North East Derbyshire. It means the planning route needs to be checked properly. A householder roof system in Wingerworth is very different from a supermarket roof in Dronfield, a school roof in Danesmoor, a commercial workshop at Corbriggs, a heritage-sensitive proposal near Higham or a larger solar and battery storage scheme near Temple Normanton.

Is Solar PV Already Being Considered Across North East Derbyshire?

Yes. Recent local planning activity shows Solar PV being considered across domestic homes, garages, schools, supermarkets, commercial premises, countryside workshop sites, private-wire solar proposals and larger solar-plus-battery schemes.

Domestic roof solar

25/01022/FLH — 82 Longedge Lane, Wingerworth

Proposed extensions and raising of the roofline by 300mm, with the inclusion of new solar panels. Status: conditional permission granted, decision dated 09/02/2026. The decision also included informative notes about coal mining features at surface or shallow depth, showing why ground and development constraints can matter locally.

Garage roof solar

25/00626/FLH — Pine Lodge, Birkin Lane, Wingerworth

Garage adjacent to a bungalow with solar panels. Status: conditional permission granted, decision dated 30/09/2025. Conditions included planting and landscaping requirements, and the decision notice also referred to coal mining area considerations.

Heritage-sensitive solar

25/00544/FLH — Blue Horizon, Main Road, Higham

Installation of solar panels affecting the setting of a listed building and conservation area. Status: conditional permission granted, decision dated 26/08/2025. This is a useful example because it shows that heritage-sensitive solar can be considered locally, but the design and setting need careful review.

School roof

PD14/4/115 — Sharley Park Community Primary School, Pilsley Road, Danesmoor

Proposed roof-mounted solar panels at Sharley Park Community Primary School. Status: prior approval application received 13/11/2025 and approved under delegated powers on 30/12/2025.

Supermarket roof

25/01028/SOLAR — Sainsbury’s, Wreakes Lane, Dronfield

Prior notification to install a non-domestic, pitched roof-mounted solar PV installation, with 388 modules rated at 455W and a total system size of 176.54kW. Status: prior approval not required, decision dated 21/01/2026.

Commercial workshop roof

25/00592/FL — Clee Hill Plant Ltd, Mansfield Road, Corbriggs

Installation of a roof-mounted 58.24kW solar PV system comprising 128 Canadian Solar 455W modules on an existing workshop building. The planning assessment described the site as a commercial yard in the countryside, screened by embankments and trees, and recommended approval subject to conditions.

Private-wire solar screening

26/00427/EIA — Land west of Chesterfield Road, Holmewood

EIA screening opinion for a private-wire solar development of around 12.7 hectares, involving a 3MW solar PV scheme and cabling route to premises at Holmewood Industrial Site. Status: the council concluded that Environmental Impact Assessment was not required, decision dated 10/06/2026.

Solar farm & battery storage screening

25/00709/EIA — Land south east of Lings Farm, Birkin Lane, Temple Normanton

EIA screening opinion for a proposed 18-hectare solar farm and battery energy storage system, involving 12MW solar PV and 12MW BESS. Status: the council concluded that Environmental Impact Assessment was not required, decision dated 27/08/2025.

These examples do not mean every North East Derbyshire property will be suitable for solar, and they do not prove that every proposed system has been installed. However, they show that Solar PV is being considered across a wide range of local settings, from Wingerworth homes and Danesmoor schools to Dronfield retail roofs, Corbriggs commercial buildings, Holmewood private-wire proposals and Temple Normanton solar-plus-battery schemes.

They also show why the planning route can vary. A domestic roof or garage project may be handled as a householder application. A school, supermarket or commercial building may use the non-domestic solar prior approval route. A larger land-based solar or battery scheme may need EIA screening before the planning route is fully understood.

North East Derbyshire’s Wider Renewable Energy Context

Warm Homes support

North East Derbyshire District Council has announced Warm Homes: Local Grant support for eligible households, with possible improvements including insulation, solar panels and battery storage. Funding depends on eligibility, property suitability, scheme criteria and technical surveys.

Schools and public buildings

The Sharley Park Community Primary School example shows that school roofs form part of the local solar picture. For schools and public buildings, roof condition, electricity use, glare, access and long-term maintenance all need to be considered.

Commercial and land-based solar

Examples at Dronfield, Corbriggs, Holmewood and Temple Normanton show that North East Derbyshire has both roof-mounted commercial solar potential and a wider land-based solar and battery storage context.

For homeowners, landlords, schools, farms, commercial property owners and local businesses, the useful lesson is the same: solar should be considered as part of the property as a whole. Roof suitability, planning status, coal mining legacy, insulation, electricity usage, battery storage and long-term energy goals all need to be reviewed together.

Are There Solar Panel Grants in North East Derbyshire?

Some North East Derbyshire residents may be able to access support for energy-efficiency improvements, depending on eligibility and funding availability. North East Derbyshire District Council has announced Warm Homes: Local Grant support for eligible privately owned homes and private rented properties, with possible improvements including insulation, solar panels and battery storage.

The council information explains that eligible properties generally need to have an EPC rating of D, E, F or G, and households must meet scheme criteria such as income, means-tested benefits or eligible postcode routes. Measures are also subject to technical review, property suitability and scheme budgets.

Important: It is important not to assume that solar panels will be funded or that every home will qualify. Grant schemes depend on eligibility, property surveys, funding availability, planning constraints, technical suitability and scheme rules. Residents should check the latest official North East Derbyshire District Council guidance before making decisions.

Anyone interested in grant support should check the latest information directly through the official council route, such as North East Derbyshire District Council’s Warm Homes information, before assuming funding is available.

Solar Panel Batteries North East Derbyshire: When Does Battery Storage Make Sense?

Solar panel batteries in North East Derbyshire may be worth considering for homes that generate solar electricity during the day but use more power in the evening. A battery can store surplus electricity from your solar panels so you can use more of it later, instead of exporting it straight back to the grid.

The Energy Saving Trust explains that solar batteries store electricity generated during the day so it can be used later, including at night or during cloudy periods. This can be especially relevant for households with EV chargers, heat pumps, electric cooking, home offices or higher evening electricity usage.

Battery storage can also be relevant for schools, supermarkets, farms, workshops and businesses where electricity demand varies across the day. The Temple Normanton screening example also shows battery energy storage being considered as part of larger solar infrastructure in the district.

However, a battery is not automatically right for every property. It depends on your electricity usage, solar generation, tariff, budget and whether the system is designed to match your needs.

Commercial Solar Panels North East Derbyshire: Schools, Supermarkets, Workshops and Industrial Sites

Commercial solar panels may be a strong option for some North East Derbyshire businesses and organisations with suitable roof space and daytime electricity use. The district includes schools, supermarkets, industrial estates, workshops, commercial yards, farms, offices, depots and rural businesses where solar can be worth assessing.

The Dronfield Sainsbury’s example shows how supermarket roofs can support larger non-domestic Solar PV systems. The Clee Hill Plant example at Corbriggs shows how a workshop roof in a commercial yard can be assessed in a countryside setting. The Holmewood private-wire proposal shows a different type of commercial energy context, where solar generation is considered in connection with nearby industrial premises.

Commercial solar can be useful where a business, school or organisation uses a lot of electricity during the day, because more of the electricity generated by the panels can be used on site. Larger roof areas may also make it possible to install far more Solar PV capacity than a typical domestic system.

However, commercial solar needs a detailed assessment. Roof size, roof structure, roof condition, access, grid connection, electricity demand, energy tariffs, inverter siting, glare, planning constraints, coal mining legacy, landscape impact, biodiversity and expected payback all need to be reviewed before making a recommendation.

Solar Panel Installers Covering North East Derbyshire

Positive Energy Solutions helps homeowners and businesses across North East Derbyshire understand whether solar panels, Solar PV, battery storage or commercial solar could be right for their property.

Areas we cover include: Dronfield, Clay Cross, Eckington, Killamarsh, Wingerworth, Ashover, Barlow, Calow, Grassmoor, Holymoorside, Holmewood, North Wingfield, Pilsley, Renishaw, Shirland, Stonebroom, Tupton and Unstone.

Because North East Derbyshire includes suburban homes, former coalfield areas, rural villages, schools, supermarkets, workshops, industrial sites, heritage-sensitive settings and larger land-based solar proposals, we always recommend checking the individual property rather than making assumptions based on location alone.

Solar Panel Guides for North East Derbyshire Towns and Villages

We are also creating local solar guides for towns and villages across North East Derbyshire, with information on roof suitability, shading, planning considerations, battery storage and expected solar output.

Solar Panels Dronfield Solar Panels Clay Cross Solar Panels Eckington Solar Panels Killamarsh Solar Panels Wingerworth Solar Panels Ashover Solar Panels Barlow Solar Panels Calow Solar Panels Grassmoor Solar Panels Holymoorside Solar Panels Holmewood Solar Panels North Wingfield Solar Panels Pilsley Solar Panels Renishaw Solar Panels Shirland Solar Panels Stonebroom Solar Panels Tupton Solar Panels Unstone

As each local guide is published, we will link to it from this page so you can find information specific to your town or village.

Are Solar Panels Worth It in North East Derbyshire?

For many homes, schools, farms and businesses in North East Derbyshire, solar panels may be well worth considering. A representative PVGIS estimate suggests that a suitable 4kWp system could generate around 4,044 kWh per year, and local planning activity shows Solar PV being considered across homes, garages, schools, supermarkets, commercial workshop roofs, private-wire proposals and larger solar-plus-battery schemes.

However, solar suitability always depends on the individual property. Roof direction, shading, roof condition, planning constraints, former mining legacy, landscape impact, electricity usage, commercial demand and battery storage all need to be considered before deciding whether solar is right.

That is why Positive Energy Solutions starts with clear, practical advice. We will help you understand whether solar panels, Solar PV, solar panel batteries or commercial solar are suitable for your North East Derbyshire property.

FAQs About Solar Panels in North East Derbyshire

Do solar panels work in North East Derbyshire?

Yes, solar panels can work in North East Derbyshire. They generate electricity from daylight, not just direct sunshine. The main factors are roof direction, shading, roof space, roof condition and how much electricity the property uses.

Is North East Derbyshire too cloudy for solar panels?

No. Cloudy weather reduces output compared with bright sunshine, but it does not rule solar out. A property-specific assessment is the best way to estimate likely performance for your roof, school, farm or commercial premises.

How much electricity could solar panels generate in North East Derbyshire?

A representative PVGIS estimate suggests that a suitable 1kWp system in North East Derbyshire could generate around 1,011 kWh per year. A typical 4kWp system could therefore produce around 4,044 kWh per year, depending on roof direction, pitch, shading and system design.

Do I need planning permission for solar panels in North East Derbyshire?

Many domestic roof-mounted solar installations may fall under permitted development rights, but not all. Commercial roofs, school roofs, conservation-sensitive buildings, countryside sites, heritage settings, land-based arrays and larger solar developments may need extra checks.

Can homes in Dronfield, Clay Cross or Wingerworth have solar panels?

Often, yes, but each property needs checking. Roof direction, chimney shading, neighbouring buildings, roof condition, planning status and electricity use all affect whether solar is suitable.

Can properties in former mining areas have solar panels?

Often, yes, but ground and development constraints should be checked where relevant. Some North East Derbyshire planning decisions include coal mining legacy notes, particularly for building works or development affecting land. Roof-mounted solar on an existing building is a different consideration from groundworks or land-based solar.

Can schools and supermarkets in North East Derbyshire install solar panels?

Some school and supermarket roofs may be suitable for solar panels. Local planning examples include Sharley Park Community Primary School and Sainsbury’s in Dronfield, but every building still needs checks for roof structure, glare, access, planning route and electricity usage.

Are solar panel batteries worth it in North East Derbyshire?

Solar panel batteries can be useful if your property generates electricity during the day but uses more power in the evening. They may also be worth considering for homes with EV chargers, heat pumps, electric cooking, home offices, schools or businesses with varied electricity demand. They are not essential for every property.

Can North East Derbyshire businesses install commercial solar panels?

Yes, some North East Derbyshire businesses may be suitable for commercial solar panels, especially where they have usable roof space and daytime electricity demand. Local examples include a supermarket roof in Dronfield and a commercial workshop roof at Corbriggs.

Are there solar grants in North East Derbyshire?

North East Derbyshire District Council has announced Warm Homes: Local Grant support for eligible households, with possible measures including solar panels and battery storage. Eligibility depends on EPC rating, household circumstances, funding availability, property suitability and technical surveys.

Find Out If Solar Is Right for Your North East Derbyshire Property

Solar panels can be a good option for many homes, schools, farms and businesses across North East Derbyshire, but every property is different. Roof direction, shading, roof condition, planning considerations, coal mining legacy, heritage setting, electricity usage and battery storage all affect whether solar is likely to be worthwhile.

If you live in Dronfield, Clay Cross, Eckington, Killamarsh, Wingerworth, Ashover, Barlow, Calow, Grassmoor, Holymoorside, Holmewood, North Wingfield, Pilsley, Renishaw, Shirland, Stonebroom, Tupton, Unstone or another part of North East Derbyshire, you can start by using our remote solar survey. Simply pinpoint your roof online and our team will review your property before discussing the next steps with you.

Ready to check whether your North East Derbyshire roof could be suitable for solar?

Start with a free remote solar survey and get practical, no-pressure advice based on your actual property.

Start Your Free Remote Solar Survey

You can also return to our main Solar Panels Derbyshire page to learn more about solar installation across the wider county.