Westmill Wind Farm and Westmill Solar become first community energy co-operatives to secure Fair Tax Mark


Oxfordshire-based Westmill Wind Farm and Westmill Solar Farm have today (10th November) secured their first Fair Tax Mark certifications, and join the growing movement of responsible businesses who are proud to ‘say what they pay with pride’.

The two renewable energy co-operatives are co-located on agricultural land in Oxfordshire and pursued Fair Tax Mark certification in parallel.

The Fair Tax Mark is an independent certification, which recognises organisations that demonstrate they are paying the right amount of corporation tax in the right place, at the right time. More than 55 businesses have now been certified. These include national brands such as Timpson, Lush, and Richer Sounds, FTSE listed companies including SSE and Marshalls Plc., as well as co-operatives, family businesses and social enterprises.

Mark Luntley, Westmill Wind Farm, Chair said: “We are delighted to have jointly received this accreditation with Westmill Solar Coop. Taxes are the price of a civilised society, they pay for the public services we all use. As member cooperatives we see paying correct taxes as part of our commitment to the seventh cooperative principle – concern for community.”

Tom Parkinson, Westmill Solar, Chair said: “The Westmill energy co-operatives were founded to pioneer a cleaner energy system and a more sustainable world. A fair tax system is essential to both – and so something that all organisations should crave.”

Paul Monaghan, Chief Executive, Fair Tax Mark, said: “We are delighted to announce that two of the UK’s pioneers of community-led, renewable energy generation have newly secured the Fair Tax Mark. Westmill Wind and Westmill Solar are inspiring co-operatives that demonstrate a deep commitment to responsible tax conduct, and grasp how important this is to the UK’s transition to a low-carbon economy. Their certification has been supported by Energy4All (who were accredited in 2019) and Ethex.

“The public rightly expects responsible behaviour, but far too often they’re reading headlines that describe the tactics businesses employ to avoid contributing the tax they should to the public purse. It is estimated that annually, due to corporate profits being shifted to tax havens, corporate tax revenue losses in the UK amount to at least £7bn. Just think of the nurses, doctors and teachers we could employ, or the renewable energy infrastructure we could build if that tax was paid as it should be?”