Harrogate residents Ralph Armsby and his partner Judy Carrivick ditched their petrol car for an electric Kia e-Niro earlier this year.
They got the car on a four-year lease and pay around £450 a month plus £460 a year in insurance.
Because it’s a low emission vehicle they pay zero car tax, and when they charge it at home it ends up costing just over 1p a mile to drive.
Mr Armsby said switching to an EV was “a no-brainer” due to the environmental cost of driving a petrol car.
“We’re very aware of air pollution, not just from the car but it starts when they take the oil out of ground, to tankers driving around the UK.
“You should get something that is powered down a wire rather than being pumped out at stations all over the place.”
Mr Amsby said it’s important to check with Northern Powergrid that your home is able to install a charging point because there was a lack of fast public charging points in Harrogate.
It cost the couple around £600 to install one, which they plug into the car overnight whilst they sleep so they can wake up with a full charge.
If they decide to charge the car throughout the day, it works out at around 3p a mile.
Range anxiety
Mr Armsby said he sometimes suffers from “range anxiety”, the phenomenon where EV drivers are worried their car will run out of charge before they find somewhere to power it up. But on a full charge, their car can manage over 280 miles, depending on driving style.
They use an app called ZapMap to find public charging points. During a recent trip to Wales, they found towns much smaller than Harrogate were better equipped for EV drivers with more places to charge.
Harrogate has several public charging points, with 7kw, 24kw and 50kw connections.
The only fast 50kw charging points are at Harrogate Borough Council’s civic centre at Knapping Mount, where it costs more to charge than at home. There are also three fast charging points outside Lidl in Knaresborough.
If you charge your car at the civic centre it takes around half an hour to get a full charge.
Read more:
- Green Shoots: Why Harrogate should be at the vanguard of tackling climate change
- Harrogate’s addiction to SUVs contributing to climate crisis
- Green Shoots: Harrogate district plumber swaps ‘dirty diesel’ for vegetable fat
Mr Armsby said the council charging points were welcome, but Harrogate needed more and was poorly equipped for business travellers who might be using the convention centre.
He said:
“If you come here on a conference, you’ll be fighting for a space there.
“We desperately need more fast charging points.”
There are other slower charging 7kw charging points around the district, which are able to give an EV a short boost.
There are even now charging points at the almost 1,000-year-old Fountains Abbey. Mr Armsby said he has visited twice because he could charge his car outside the ruin.
In total, the Harrogate district has 53 EV charging points in 30 different locations, but some can only be used by Teslas.

Mr Armsby plugging in
Mr Armbsy said many more on-street charging facilities were needed in Harrogate so people can plug in whilst they shop.
He added:
“Other countries have had on-street charging and had it for years, we’re not world beating in the UK, we’re miles behind European countries.”
Joy to drive
The couple are retired and use their car mainly for leisure and shopping.
Mr Armsby said:
“It’s a joy to drive, we’re fighting each other on who’s going to drive!”
Whilst electric vehicles still produce emissions through their tyres — and there are concerns over the mining of minerals to make the batteries — Mr Armbsy said he would never go back to driving a petrol car.
He said:
“Harrogate is quite polluted. Cold Bath Road, for example, is a rat run in the mornings with kids being dropped off in Range Rovers. It would be so much nicer on these roads if everyone was driving electric.”
Do you have an interesting project or passion that improves the environment and could feature in Green Shoots? Contact thomas@thestrayferret.co.uk
Power cut leaves Harrogate businesses in the darkA power cut on Beulah Street in Harrogate this morning has forced several businesses to close.
It is not known if the outage is related to Storm Arwen, which is still affecting electricity supply in the district.
Costa Coffee, British Red Cross, Aplifon Hearing Centre are all closed. At CEX the lights are not working but the tills and card reader are so they can still serve customers who must wait outside.
Power went off at about 8.30am and was still off at the time of publication. It is expected to return later today.
James Buckley, supervisor at CEX, said there are several different power lines on Beulah Street, so businesses on the other side of the road are open as normal.
He said:
“We are in darkness. It’s a health and safety issue, but we can still sell stuff but not let customers into the store.”
Connie Lancaster, assistant manager at the British Red Cross, decided to close completely until the power comes back on. She has been unable to get more information from Northern Powergrid due to telephone wait times of almost two hours.
She said:
“We’ve been very unlucky”.
Read more:
- Harrogate Theatre panto returns to the stage today following leak
- Plans submitted to demolish former Harrogate Debenhams
Many homes in the district are still without power following Friday night’s storm, according to a live map by Northern Powergrid, the company responsible for the electricity distribution network across the North East, Yorkshire and northern Lincolnshire.
One reader, who asked not to be named, said the rural area of Skelding, half a mile away from Grantley village, told us last night:
“We feel forgotten about. We were given a tiny bit of power on Saturday night at 7pm so 21 hours of nothing. However this wasn’t enough for most lights, boilers, washer or ovens. Then this afternoon came the good news that Grantley village and school are back on full power however the farms and houses in Skelding are now without anything
Another reader from Grantley said her family had booked into a hotel when temperatures in their house plunged to six degrees centigrade.
Family moves to Rudding Park to escape minus one degree home
A Beckwithshaw family has booked into Rudding Park hotel to escape its freezing home after two days without power.
Sylvia Skipper’s home was among thousands in the district to lose electricity when Storm Arwen struck late on Friday.
Power has returned to most but about 800 properties in the Harrogate district are still affected, according to a live map by Northern Powergrid, the company responsible for the electricity distribution network across the North East, Yorkshire and northern Lincolnshire.
Ms Skipper, who lives on Shaw Lane, said her family had been without power since 9.20pm on Friday. There has been no hot water or heating, despite the freezing conditions, and they have been unable to cook. She said:
“Our house yesterday afternoon was minus one degrees.
“We couldn’t take any more and are now staying at Rudding Park. We have no idea whether power will be restored today.
“This is inhumane. We have lost faith as we have been forgotten about.”
Northern Powergrid’s live map shows 660 homes are without power in the Summerbridge and Bishop Thornton area, along with 60 in Spofforth, 30 in North Stainley, 20 in Pannal, 20 in High Birstwith, 20 in Kirkby Malzeard, fewer than 10 in Knaresborough, fewer than 10 in Greenhow Hill.
Ms Skipper said:
“The communication from Northern Powergrid has been dreadful.
“Until this afternoon we didn’t even have a phone signal on top of this so we had to venture in the car so that we could communicate with Northern Powergrid.
“I have seen their Twitter updates about providing hot drinks and support to numerous areas in the North East yet there has been absolutely nothing for us or our neighbours.”
Read more:
- Storm Arwen: More than 700 Harrogate district homes still without power
- Harrogate mum who struggled to feed kids wants to break stigma
Steve Crisp, whose home between Beckwithshaw and Leathley is also without power, said:
“I keep trying to access Northern Powergrid but the website is unreliable and this morning when I rang and confirmed I would like to wait to speak to someone the system just cut me off.
“Patience and Dunkirk spirit being stretched!”
He and his wife were luckier than some because they had a log burner, which provided heat and a means to cook beans on toast.
‘One of worst storms for 20 years’
Northern Powergrid’s latest update at 11pm last night said it had restored power to around 208,000 of the 240,000 customers. About 100 engineers from other power companies had been drafted in to help. It added:
“The scale of damage in some locations is so extensive that in some cases, large sections of overhead lines will need to be rebuilt in order to restore supplies.
“Where it can, Northern Powergrid is deploying temporary fixes that get customers back on supply whilst its teams coordinate the necessary permanent repairs to get the region’s power network back to full strength.
Rod Gardner, Northern Powergrid’s major incident manager, added:
Fallen tree causes power cut in Harrogate district“The impact from Storm Arwen has been one of the worst we’ve experienced in the last 20 years.”
More than 500 homes suffered a power cut this morning when a partially fallen tree rested on overhead power cables in the Harrogate district.
A total of 568 homes in Birstwith and Hampsthwaite were affected by the incident, which was reported at 10.41am this morning.
Power was restored after about an hour.
A spokeswoman for electricity company Northern Powergrid told the Stray Ferret:
“The tree meant the cable was quite low and we needed to switch off power while we dealt with it.”
She added the company had switched the supply while the tree was made safe and power was back on in all the homes affected by 11.33am.
Read more:
- Birstwith Show cancelled due to covid uncertainty
- New vicar for Killinghall, Birstwith and Hampsthwaite
Harrogate’s Otley Road set for yet more roadworks
Five weeks of travel disruption on Otley Road in Harrogate will begin on Monday due to work by Northern Gas Networks .
Work will take place around the Otley Road/Harlow Moor Road junction and is scheduled to finish on Friday September 3.
The news is unlikely to be welcomed by commuters or businesses that have had to contend with an almost continuous set of roadworks on the road since January.
Yorkshire Water dug up the surface to re-lay water pipes and Northern Powergrid did the same to relocate electricity infrastructure.
Next week’s works are to prepare for the delayed Otley Road cycle route.
Read more
- £827,100 contract to start work on Otley Road cycle path in September
- Delayed Otley Road cycle path set to begin in August
North Yorkshire County Council told the Stray Ferret that work on the cycle route will begin on September 6.
Nigel Smith, head of highway operations at the council, said:
Harrogate to get £1.5m to improve net-zero energy infrastructure“Utility works by Northern Gas Networks and Northern Powergrid remain to be completed before work can begin on phase 1 of the Otley Road cycle scheme.
“Northern Gas Networks is scheduled to be on site between August 2 and September 3, and Northern Powergrid between August 16 and 27. BT has confirmed its works can be carried out during the Harlow Moor Road junction improvement.
“The anticipated start date for phase 1 of the Otley Road cycle scheme, which includes the Harlow Moor Road junction improvement, is September 6 this year, subject to the above utilities completing their work.”
Northern Powergrid will spend £1.5 million of government funding in Harrogate to increase the town’s energy capacity and help prepare for future decarbonisation.
The money will be spent on infrastructure upgrades that will support more electric bus use, electric vehicle charging points or other future net-zero needs.
The funding has come from the government’s energy regulator Ofgem and is part of £53 million that will be spent on 14 projects across the north of England.
Patrick Erwin, policy and markets director at Northern Powergrid, said:
“This is targeted investment in the region’s energy networks, which will kick-start projects and increase prosperity across the north.
“We play a critical role powering the everyday lives of the communities we serve. Electricity is one of the most important building blocks for economic growth. In the coming years, our reliance on electricity will increase as we turn to electricity to heat our homes and power our cars.”
Read more:
- Locations of 34 electric vehicle charge points revealed
- Harrogate businesses go electric as number of cars licensed doubles
Meanwhile, latest figures from the Department for Transport show that the number of electric vehicles licensed in Harrogate has nearly doubled since 2019.
According to the data, the number registered in the district increased from 446 at the start of 2019 to 863 by the third quarter of 2020.
By comparison, the UK saw the number of vehicles licensed increase from 199,886 to 355,872.
The government will ban the sale of new petrol and diesel cars by 2030.
30-minute delays at A61 Wormald Green roadworksThree-way traffic lights on the A61 near Wormald Green are bringing misery to motorists, with reports of delays of up to 30 minutes this morning.
Northern Powergrid installed the lights to allow engineers to repair a fault to the underground power network that supplies nearby homes.
The lights are near Monkton Moor Garage on the A61 and there is no easy diversion for traffic heading into Harrogate or in the opposite direction to Ripon.
A Northern Powergrid spokesperson apologised for this morning’s delays and said it will be putting someone on site tomorrow from 7am-7pm to improve the traffic flow at the lights.
The Stray Ferret received several calls about the roadworks this morning for our live traffic blog. Some motorists were stuck in jams for 30 minutes and consequently were late for work.
The delays have been ongoing since 7am this morning and although they peaked during rush hour, traffic has remained heavy all day and is likely to build up this afternoon as people head home.
Read more:
- Highways England has called for further assessment into a proposed 13,000-home development
- Number of electric car licences doubles in Harrogate
North Yorkshire County Council‘s roadwork map shows the work is ongoing until Friday next week but Northern Powergrid said it hoped to complete the project sooner.
The spokeswoman said:
“We would like to thank everyone for their patience whilst we carry out these unplanned emergency works, the repair is being treated as urgent and as soon as our work is completed the traffic lights will be removed to allow traffic to return to normal.”
Contact the Stray Ferret, if it is safe to do so, from 6am each weekday on 01423 276197 with any traffic and travel updates.
Harrogate street spends days in darknessA street in central Harrogate has spent the past three working days in darkness after the power company failed to fix a fault.
Businesses on Victoria Avenue said that the constant power cuts have been very disruptive.
Northern Powergrid has been trying the fix the issue since Friday. However, businesses report that, each day, the power goes off for several hours and offices have had to close as a result.
Read more:
- Andrew Jones MP enters devolution debate
- Plan to convert Harrogate guest house to flats
- Play reveals Harrogate’s secret royal role in WWII
Many on the street are offices, but there are also opticians and dental practices which have had to cancel some appointments.
Andrew Gray, the director of Truth Legal and a landlord on the street, told the Stray Ferret that all of his tenants have gone home:
“It has been massively disruptive. I have a team of lawyers, together with five sets of tenants in this building, and they are all trying to work from home. With coronavirus some businesses are already prepared to switch to home working but there are some office staff who don’t have laptops.”
David Simister, one of the directors at Different PR, also told the Stray Ferret:
“There haven’t been this many power cuts since the Winter of Discontent. It is a nightmare to deal with but I have been able to work from home as a result. Following on from coronavirus this has been the last thing many businesses on this street need.”
Northern Powergrid’s live power map shows that 40 properties have been affected. A spokesperson said:
“We have had engineers out again today. They dug up the road to get access to the faulty cables. It will only be a temporary fix but it should stop the power going out on an intermittent basis.”