Kentish Gazette Canterbury & District

New name for UK’S biggest solar farm as start date set

Proposed energy park rebranded after takeover by London-based firm

- By Joe Wright jwright@thekmgroup.co.uk

The UK’S biggest solar farm - primed to be built across 900 acres of countrysid­e just 10 miles from Canterbury - has been acquired by new operators planning to start constructi­on next year.

Previously known as Cleve Hill, the mammoth site in Graveney has been renamed as part of the takeover by London-based group Quinbrook Infrastruc­ture Partners.

It now goes by the name of Project Fortress, with previous owners Hive Energy and Wirsol Energy leaving the controvers­ial project they gained permission for.

Under their management, work was primed to start at some stage this year, however, it never materialis­ed.

Now, Quinbrook, which manages assets worth more than £1.5 billion, has taken on the scheme and plans to begin constructi­on in the first half of next year

The solar farm, made up of 880,000 panels, is hoped to become operationa­l in 2023 and have more than three times the generating capacity of the country’s current largest solar site.

Project Fortress, which will be powered by a lithium battery storage plant the size of 20 football pitches, was given planning permission by the government last spring in the face of strong opposition.

Swale Borough Council, which previously considered launching a costly judicial review against the decision, says it hopes to hold talks with the new owners.

A spokesman said: “As the planning authority, we have no view on the ownership of any developmen­t, but we will get in touch with the new owners to establish contact arrangemen­ts and understand their programme.

“When the scheme was approved by the secretary of state, several requiremen­ts were placed on the permission for the developer to undertake before the scheme can start on site. These have been ongoing and more submission­s are required.

“We have liaison arrangemen­ts in place with the local parish council and we will consult with the key agencies and regulators who may be involved in assessing the submission­s made before accepting clearance of a requiremen­t.”

Quinbrook already has two huge solar farm projects in Nevada, in the United States, and prides itself on being an investment group solely involved in renewable energy schemes.

It is to act as owner-operator of the £450 million Graveneny site and plans to sell energy-supply contracts for the project over the coming months.

Company co-founder Rory Quinlan said: “We believe Project Fortress is a landmark transactio­n on many fronts and represents a new frontier in UK solar teamed with large scale battery storage.

“We have been immersed in large-scale solar and storage in the US for many years and we can apply our significan­t experience in project design and equipment selection to ensure Fortress becomes the new benchmark for renewables that support the UK grid rather than challenge it.”

“We think this is destined to become the standard for all energy supply projects in the years ahead.”

Deemed as a Nationally Significan­t Infrastruc­ture Project (NSIP), the solar farm is set to power 100,000 homes and reduce carbon emissions by 164,450 tonnes in its first year of operation.

 ?? ?? FAVERSHAM
Graveney
The proposed site for the sprawling solar farm, which has now been renamed Project Fortress
FAVERSHAM Graveney The proposed site for the sprawling solar farm, which has now been renamed Project Fortress
 ?? ?? Work will start on the site at Graveney next year
Work will start on the site at Graveney next year
 ?? ?? A CGI showing how the solar farm is set to look
A CGI showing how the solar farm is set to look

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