Why Lincolnshire is one of the strongest farm-solar regions in the UK
Lincolnshire is among the UK's largest arable counties — flat eastern fenland and lighter Lincolnshire Wolds support enormous cereal, sugar beet, brassica and salad operations. The county also hosts a substantial intensive poultry and pig sector, particularly in the Wolds and along the A1 corridor.
Working with Lincolnshire estates and tenant farms
Lincolnshire commercial farming is shaped substantially by estate-managed landholdings — Belton House, Burghley, Grimsthorpe, plus institutional fenland holdings together manage tens of thousands of acres of working tenanted farmland. We work routinely with tenant farmers operating on these and other estates, providing the lease addendum template, managing the landlord-agent conversation, and coordinating any planning or technical approval required by the headlease. Tenancy Reform Industry Group (TRIG) guidance applies. Many institutional landlords now have standardised tenant-PV agreements that make the consent process straightforward.
Grid connection and planning context for Lincolnshire
Northern Powergrid plus National Grid Electricity Distribution is the regional Distribution Network Operator covering most of Lincolnshire. G99 grid connection timelines run 65–90 working days for the technical study response, with full connection on most rural feeders taking 6–14 months. For capacity-constrained feeders (particularly in remote rural areas), connection can extend to 18 months. We submit G99 applications immediately after structural survey to start the clock. For export-constrained sites we design "no-export" self-consumption systems that connect in 6–8 weeks instead.
Most rooftop PV on Lincolnshire agricultural buildings falls under Class A Part 14 GPDO 2015 Permitted Development — no formal planning permission required. Exceptions: listed agricultural buildings (require Listed Building Consent), Conservation Areas, AONBs and National Park designations (Article 4 directions vary), and ground-mount installations above 9m × 9m × 4m height. We handle any required planning consultation as part of project delivery.
All eight farm-building types we deliver across Lincolnshire
Every type of working farm building in Lincolnshire can host commercial solar. Each sub-vertical has its own sizing, payback, compliance profile, and design considerations:
Specific Lincolnshire cities and towns we cover
We deliver across the full Lincolnshire farming region. Featured cities and towns with detailed area pages:
For locations not specifically listed, send us your farm address and we'll confirm coverage and rural access timing as part of the desk feasibility process. Almost every Lincolnshire agricultural location is within 60–90 minutes' drive of our operations base.
Combined re-roof + PV on Lincolnshire farm buildings
Pre-2000 farm buildings in Lincolnshire commonly carry asbestos cement roof cladding, which cannot be retrofitted with PV under the Control of Asbestos Regulations 2012. The standard solution is a combined re-roof + PV project: HSE-licensed asbestos removal (£30–£50/sqm), profiled steel re-cladding (£45–£80/sqm), then PV on the new roof. The PV business case routinely pays for 60–100% of the re-roof over the 25-year system life. We've delivered combined re-roof + PV across Lincolnshire on dairy parlours, livestock sheds, grain stores and general-purpose barns since 2019.
Get a free quote for your Lincolnshire farm solar project
Send us your half-hourly meter data, building dimensions (or aerial drone images), and a brief on your farm operation. We deliver a free desk feasibility study within 7 working days — system size per building, generation forecast, self-consumption ratio, 25-year DCF financial model with three financing scenarios, and an honest assessment of whether your site suits solar. If the numbers don't stack up, we'll tell you upfront.
Common questions about Lincolnshire farm solar
Do you cover all of Lincolnshire?
Yes — we deliver farm-building solar PV across the entire Lincolnshire agricultural region, including dairy parlours, livestock sheds, grain stores, poultry houses, pig units, polytunnels, equestrian arenas, and farm workshops. Most installs are accessible from our base within 60–90 minutes for same-day site visits.
Which DNO covers Lincolnshire?
Northern Powergrid plus National Grid Electricity Distribution is the regional Distribution Network Operator covering most of Lincolnshire. G99 grid connection timelines run 65–90 working days for technical study response, 6–14 months for full connection on most rural feeders. We submit G99 applications immediately after structural survey to compress timeline.
What's the typical Lincolnshire farm solar payback?
Payback varies by building type: 4.5–5.5 years for dairy parlours with 24/7 baseload, 5.5–6.5 years for poultry sheds, 6–7 years for grain stores with seasonal drying load, 7–8 years for equestrian and workshops. After 100% Annual Investment Allowance for incorporated farms, payback typically pulls in by 1.5–2 years.
Can we install on listed agricultural buildings in Lincolnshire?
Listed buildings need Listed Building Consent before any PV install, regardless of whether they're currently in agricultural use. Lincolnshire has more listed agricultural buildings than is often recognised — particularly listed barns, dairy parlours, and tithe barns. We engage with the conservation officer early. Listed Building Consent typically adds 8–14 weeks to the project timeline.
Do you work with tenant farmers on landlord estates?
Yes — we routinely work with tenant farmers operating on institutional and family estates including Belton House, Burghley, Grimsthorpe, plus institutional fenland holdings. Most institutional landlords have standard tenant-PV lease addenda. We provide the addendum template, manage the landlord-agent conversation, and coordinate planning or technical approval required by the headlease. Tenancy Reform Industry Group (TRIG) guidance applies.