Caerphilly Observer
Member Sign in Manage Membership
Become a Member - no ads
Menu
  • News
    • Senedd
    • Business
    • Newport
    • Opinion
  • Sport
    • Rugby union
    • Football
  • Membership & Subscriptions
  • Notices
  • Obituaries
  • About
    • Advertise
  • Sponsored Content
Menu

Half of Newport’s street lights to be switched back on

Newport | Nicholas Thomas - Local Democracy Reporting Service | Published: 17:51, Wednesday April 16th, 2025.

Support quality, independent, local journalism…that matters

From just £1 a month you can help fund our work – and use our website without adverts. Become a member today

street lights
Newport Council is looking into ways to turn street lights back on

Half of Newport’s street lights will be switched back on at night, following complaints shift workers felt unsafe travelling to or from their homes in the early hours.

Currently, street lights are switched off between midnight and 6am – except those in the city centre and along “highway safety critical areas”.

But that is set to change, after Newport City Council’s cabinet approved a new policy that leader Cllr Dimitri Batrouni said would “show we are on the side of those workers”.

Perceptions of crime, linked to dark streets, have also played a part in residents’ calls for a big switch-on.

But it could be 15 months before the new policy comes into force, because the council has to order and fit new light-sensitive cells to thousands of lampposts.

The local authority started reducing its street light operating hours in 2012, and moved to the current level in 2022.

Cllr Rhian Howells, the cabinet member for infrastructure, told colleagues “we’ve all received significant feedback on this matter”.

The new approach will cost an initial £320,000 to install the new equipment, and an estimated £139,000 annually in energy bills.

Newport Council leader Dimitri Batrouni
Newport Council leader Dimitri Batrouni

While noting the move “comes at a financial and carbon cost”, Cllr Howells said the “importance of our residents feeling safe is paramount to us”.

Other cabinet members agreed to back the switch-on, including Cllr Laura Lacey, who explained senior councillors previously had little option but to turn lights off, owing to financial pressures.

Doing so had helped protect other “critical” areas, such as social services, she said, adding she would “completely support” the new policy “now the money’s there”.

However, there was some concern from Cllr Yvonne Forsey, the cabinet member for climate change, that switching street lights back on could impact Newport’s environmental ambitions.

Cllr Forsey said she hoped Newport could eventually embrace new technology around “smart” lights that respond to movement and switch on when pedestrians approach.

Cllr Howells said she was “amenable” to those changes further down the line, but Cllr Batrouni conceded the technology was “very much in its infancy”.

“Smart street lights are the future, and definitely something we want to be a part of,” he added.


Sign-up to our daily newsletter


Support quality, independent, local journalism…that matters

From just £1 a month you can help fund our work – and use our website without adverts.

Become a member today

Unsplash
LDRS

Latest News

  • Cyber attack affecting whole of UK has had "significant impact" on Aneurin Bevan University Health Board
    £2m of Welsh Government funding to help businesses make the most of AIMonday, January 12, 2026
  • An artist’s impression of one of the new displays in Blackwood
    Town-centre display boards approved despite brightness concernsFriday, January 9, 2026
  • Welsh Labour pledges £2 bus fare cap in Senedd election manifestoFriday, January 9, 2026
  • Old Club, Bailey Street, Deri, pictured in July 2025
    Support for conversion of former club into family homeFriday, January 9, 2026
  • Mark Lawton, managing director at Harlech Food Service
    Food wholesaler smashes sales records with 20% increaseFriday, January 9, 2026
  • 115 High Street (on the right), Blackwood, pictured in June 2025
    Green light for new pool, darts and coffee shop proposal on town’s high streetFriday, January 9, 2026

Find out how the communities of Caerphilly County Borough get their names

Caerphilly

Legal & Public Notices

  • Caerphilly County Borough Council public noticesThursday, January 8, 2026
  • Caerphilly County Borough Council public noticesThursday, December 11, 2025
  • Caerphilly County Borough Council public noticesThursday, November 27, 2025
  • Notice of application for a premises licence: Darts Dungeon, BargoedThursday, November 27, 2025
© 2009-2024 Caerphilly Media Ltd, Caerphilly Miners Centre for the Community Watford Road Caerphilly, CF83 1BJ. Incorporated in Wales No. 07604006.