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    Home » UK solar farms face local backlash in Lincolnshire villages
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    UK solar farms face local backlash in Lincolnshire villages

    October 3, 2025
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    WELBOURN, Lincolnshire, October 3, 2025: Residents in a corridor of countryside between Lincoln and Sleaford are mounting opposition to proposals for three major solar farms, citing concerns about scale, environmental impacts and the role of national-level planning in bypassing local decision‑making. A public meeting convened by the Cliff Villages Solar Action Group at Welbourn Village Hall drew in excess of 300 attendees. Participants focused objections on the Springwell, Fosse Green, and Leoda projects, which collectively could cover about 10,000 acres of farmland.

    UK solar farms face local backlash in Lincolnshire villages
    Community opposition grows over land use for industrial-scale solar development projects in the UK.

    Councillor Marianne Overton, chair of the action group, described the proposals as “industrial developments on an unprecedented vast scale,” urging residents to coordinate their responses and engage in consultation phases. The Springwell Solar Farm proposal, led by EDF Renewables UK and Luminous Energy, would span roughly 3,500 acres, with arrays of solar modules up to 3.3 metres in height, perimeter security fencing, inverters, underground cabling, and local transformer infrastructure. The developers state the scheme could supply power to approximately 180,000 households.

    The project is classified as a Nationally Significant Infrastructure Project (NSIP), meaning approval lies with the Planning Inspectorate rather than local councils. The Fosse Green and Leoda projects are at earlier stages, but their planned footprint would sit adjacent to Springwell’s site, forming a continuous solar development corridor across south Lincolnshire. The action groups are requesting that planning authorities conduct cumulative impact assessments covering all three projects.

    Springwell project triggers local concerns over land use

    Attendees and organizers expressed objections related to visual intrusion, wildlife habitat disruption, loss of prime agricultural land, increased surface water runoff, removal of hedgerows, and soil compaction. They also raised concerns about infrastructure associated with large-scale solar developments. Several local groups including Leoda Solar Action and Fosse Green Solar Opposition are preparing formal submissions into upcoming public consultations. Their central aim is to ensure local voices and environmental evidence are considered in statutory reviews.

    EDF Renewables UK has stated the Springwell proposal aligns with the UK’s renewable energy and net‑zero targets. The company has also committed to ongoing community engagement and environmental mitigation in planning and design phases. Under the UK Government’s energy strategy, solar power is a prioritized technology for decarbonisation, with large-scale projects categorized as NSIPs to expedite decision-making at the national level.

    Residents seek more transparency in energy developments

    The Planning Inspectorate has confirmed it will accept representation from statutory bodies, local authorities, and members of the public during examination of applications, which must comply with the National Policy Statement for Renewable Energy Infrastructure. The Springwell project is expected to enter a formal Development Consent Order process following statutory consultation. Pending submissions for Fosse Green and Leoda are anticipated in due course. Meanwhile, community organizations in Lincolnshire continue to monitor deadlines and gather technical and environmental analyses for their responses. – By Content Syndication Services.

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