Cleve Hill Solar Park | |
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Coordinates | 51°20′04″N0°56′34″E / 51.3344°N 0.9429°E |
Status | Under construction |
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Website | www |
Cleve Hill Solar Park (formerly Project Fortress) is a photovoltaic power station under construction on the Graveney marshes between Faversham and Whitstable, Kent in the UK. [1]
Once operational, it will be the largest solar farm in the UK, generating 373 MW of electricity from 900 acres (360 ha) of solar panels, and will also include 150 MW (possibly with 700 MWh energy) of battery storage. [2] [3] [4] Because of its size, it is a nationally significant infrastructure project so outside the standard local planning procedure.
Electricity will be exported from the project via the 400 kV National Grid substation at Cleve Hill, constructed to serve the London Array offshore wind farm that lies to the north. A battery array will be placed at the substation, charging from the sunlight during the day and release the energy at night when it is needed. [5]
The solar farm was initially developed in partnership by Hive Energy and Wirsol Energy Ltd under the name Cleve Hill Solar Farm. It was acquired by Quinbrook Infrastructure Partners in October 2021 and renamed Project Fortress. [6] [7] The 800 acres (320 ha) of Grade 3b agricultural land will be covered by the fixed-angle east-west facing solar photovoltaic panels. [8]
By 2020, the planning process faced opposition by residents and environmental groups on the grounds of loss of biodiversity resulting from covering large areas with PV panels, and safety, where concerns were raised about a possible fire and explosion of the battery blocks. [9] [10]
Construction on the project started in April 2023. [3] A £238.5 million partial funding was achieved in 2025. [4]