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Updated on 
June 30, 2026
Innagreen Acquires Longhedge Solar Farm as UK Solar Buyers Prioritize Consented, Construction-Ready Assets
June 30, 2026
3 min read

GUK solar M&A is showing a clear shift toward consented, construction-ready assets as investors prioritize projects with planning certainty, defined grid pathways, and developers that can stay involved through construction and operations. Innagreen Investments’ acquisition of the 49.9MW Longhedge Solar Farm in Nottinghamshire reflects this buyer behavior: capital is moving toward assets where the core development risk has already been absorbed by the seller, leaving the buyer with a clearer route to energization and long-term yield.

Longhedge is commercially important because the project has already been developed through consent, reducing one of the biggest execution barriers in the UK solar market. Once operational, the project is expected to generate enough clean electricity to power around 15,000 homes annually. The transaction also carries a local planning and land-use signal, with the project including more than 2.5km of new species-rich hedgerows and two permissive bridleways that open up the site for wider community use.

For Innagreen, this is not a one-off asset purchase. Longhedge marks the fourth project developed in partnership with the seller, following Dunbeg South earlier this year. That repeat relationship matters commercially. It suggests Innagreen is not only buying megawatts, but also backing a development partner with a proven ability to originate, consent, and continue managing projects beyond transaction close.

The seller’s continued role is equally important. The team will remain involved in development and construction management, and will also provide technical services once Longhedge becomes operational. In a market where buyers are increasingly sensitive to delivery risk, that integrated post-sale support can improve transaction confidence and support stronger buyer appetite for late-stage assets.

This deal also reinforces a broader valuation signal in European renewables M&A: consented and ready-to-build solar projects are commanding stronger interest than early-stage pipelines. Buyers are willing to compete for projects where planning risk has been cleared, community obligations are defined, and delivery responsibilities are supported by experienced developers. Sellers that can combine consented capacity with construction oversight and technical services are better positioned than those offering undeveloped pipeline exposure alone.

For UK solar developers, Longhedge shows the value of taking projects deep into the development cycle before monetization. Early-stage land and grid positions still have strategic value, but the strongest buyer demand is increasingly concentrated around projects with consent, route-to-market visibility, and executable construction plans. For investors such as Innagreen, the advantage lies in securing assets that can move toward operations without restarting the development-risk clock.

The forward-looking signal is clear: UK solar M&A will continue to reward developers that can deliver bankable, locally consented projects and remain accountable through construction. As grid access, planning scrutiny, and community acceptance continue to shape project economics, repeat buyer-developer partnerships are likely to become a more important route for scaling solar portfolios than opportunistic one-off acquisitions.

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