South Cotswolds MP says solar farm ownership is a “security issue”

Roz Savage has raised concerns over the company now in charge of developing the Lime Down solar park

Author: Peter Davison, Local Democracy ReporterPublished 5th Jun 2025

The ownership of the development company behind a massive solar farm in the Wiltshire countryside has been described as a ‘matter of economic security’ by South Cotswolds MP Roz Savage.

The MP – whose constituency spans from Cirencester in the north to the outskirts of Chippenham and Corsham – has written to net zero secretary Ed Miliband raising concerns about the acquisition of Island Green Power – which is developing the proposed 2,200-acre Lime Down solar farm in the Malmesbury countryside – by Macquarie Asset Management.

Australian bank Macquarie, which previously owned a 50 per cent stake in Island Green Power, recently acquired the company in its entirety. Macquarie owned Thames Water between 2006 and 2017, during which time the utility firm’s debt increased from £3.4 billion to £10.8 billion.

“Given Macquarie’s track record as the former owner of Thames Water, under whose stewardship the utility accrued billions in debt while service standards declined, this development understandably raises alarm,” writes the MP in a letter to the minister.

“My constituents and I are troubled by the prospect of a company with such a history taking control of a major infrastructure project in our region.

“I would argue that this acquisition poses serious questions about our economic and environmental security.

“Allowing a company linked to the deterioration of critical utilities, with associated widespread toxic pollution of our waterways, to lead large-scale infrastructure development is, in my view, deeply misguided.

“We must learn from past failures.”

The MP, who is a member of the Green Lib Dems parliamentary group – says she has opposed the plans from the outset.

“The Lime Down proposal is problematic on multiple fronts. It would industrialise an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, sacrifice valuable agricultural land, install a Battery Energy Storage System dangerously close to a main railway line, and offer little to no tangible benefit to the local population,” she said in her letter.

She has repeated her requests – first made in July 2024 and again in October last year – for a meeting with the minister.

The Lime Down solar park would be built at six sites in close proximity around the villages of Hullavington, Stanton St Quintin, Sherston, and Luckington.

Island Green Power says the solar arrays would generate 500 megawatts of electricity – enough to power around 115,000 homes.

This week the company published its preferred route for the 13 mile long cable that would connect the six sites and their single battery storage unit with the National Grid’s Melksham Substation.

The trench for the cable would be 1.7 metres (5.5 ft) wide and two metres (6.5 ft) deep, and would have to be channeled under the M4 and the Bristol-to-London railway line.

Island Green Power says burying the cable would avoid running it along overhead pylons.

It says the project would “support national and regional aims to decarbonise our electricity systems and bolster our energy security”.

Because the capacity of the proposed development is over 50 megawatts, the project is classified as a Nationally Significant Infrastructure Project.

This means permission for the scheme will need to come from Ed Miliband rather than Wiltshire Council.

However, Wiltshire Council has voiced its opposition, saying in March this year: “To see that much farmland converted and the essential industrialisation of the countryside provides good grounds for refusal.”

Island Green Power said this week it hopes to submit a development application by the end of the year and, if successful, wants to start construction in 2027.

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