Home /
About Ramsgate /
News / Ramsgate Town Council’s response to the National Grid Sea Link Project Hearings
Below
is the response and representation made by Ramsgate Town Council to the
Examining Authority during both the Open Floor Hearing and the Compulsory
Acquisition Hearing. This has also been emailed to South East Anglia for
inclusion in the post-hearing submission deadline 6.
24th March 2025: Open Floor Hearing 3 (OFH3)
Ramsgate
Town Council accepts the principle of the Sea Link project. But we remain
deeply concerned that the Kent onshore component—particularly the converter
station and associated land-take around Minster Marshes and the Pegwell Bay
area—falls on one of the most environmentally sensitive landscapes in our
region.
This
is an area valued not simply for scenery, but for its ecology, floodplain
function, bird migration routes, and connection to the Pegwell Bay protected
site complex. For many local people, it is also one of the few remaining places
that offers quiet, open natural space—something that is increasingly scarce in
Thanet.
We
are not persuaded that the project as currently configured demonstrates that
this location is the only viable option, nor that lower-impact
alternatives—particularly brownfield opportunities near Richborough—have been
properly tested or evidenced.
Concerns
about cumulative pressure
Thanet
is carrying the burden of multiple major development demands: offshore grid
connections, transport upgrades, housebuilding, and regeneration pressures. As
a coastal district with limited land and significant deprivation, our
communities are already experiencing the cumulative loss of green space,
marshland, biodiversity and amenity.
Sea
Link’s footprint in Kent would impose long-term industrialisation on an area
whose environmental value is high but whose landform is fragile, low-lying, and
increasingly vulnerable to climate-driven flood risk. We believe these factors
have not yet been meaningfully reconciled with the land-take proposed.
Community
impact and fairness
For
local residents, particularly in Ramsgate, Minster, Cliffsend and the
surrounding parishes, there is a sense that nationally significant
infrastructure is repeatedly routed to areas least able to resist the loss of
valued natural space.
We
hear regularly from residents who do support renewable energy and want the grid
to be strengthened—but they ask a simple question: “Why here, when alternatives
exist?”
We
believe that is a fair question, and one the Examination should test robustly.
What
we are asking the Examining Authority to do
We
ask the Examining Authority to:
a.
Rigorously test whether Minster Marshes is genuinely unavoidable
Require
a transparent demonstration that alternative sites—especially brownfield areas
around Richborough—have been fully modelled, compared and discounted for sound
reasons.
b.
Require the Applicant to minimise land-take and permanent impacts
Where
temporary possession, rights-only arrangements, or rerouting can significantly
reduce damage to the marshes, these should be preferred.
c.
Scrutinise hydrological and flood-risk implications
Raising
platforms, piling, haul roads and cable infrastructure cannot be allowed to
worsen flood behaviour in an area already prone to groundwater and tidal
interactions.
d.
Protect access, recreation, and cultural landscape
The
Way of St?Augustine and the marsh routes are integral to local identity. Their
loss, even temporarily, will be deeply felt.
e.
Require stronger community engagement and mitigation commitments
Communities
must not be left worse off—environmentally, socially, or visually—because of a
national infrastructure scheme.
Closing
Chair,
Members, our message today is constructive and clear:
We
support the national need, but not the unnecessary local harm.
Ramsgate
Town Council asks that this Examination ensures the full range of alternatives
is honestly weighed, and that the final outcome—whatever form it takes—is not
simply the easiest route for the developer, but the right one for both the
nation and the people who live here.
Thank
you for hearing our representation.
25th March 2026: Compulsory Acquisition Hearing 2
Ramsgate
Town Council supports the national need for grid reinforcement but objects to
the compulsory acquisition of Minster Marshes and adjacent land, where
harm is high, alternatives exist, and the statutory tests under Planning Act
2008 s.122 have not been met.
1.
Necessity Test – s.122(2)
The
Applicant has not shown why permanent acquisition is essential for
several plots associated with:
Construction compounds, haul routes and temporary
access;
Drainage and flood attenuation;
PRoW realignments.
Request: Convert permanent CA to temporary
possession or rights-only powers wherever feasible.
2.
Alternatives – brownfield before marshland
Sea
Link’s Kent configuration—Pegwell Bay landfall, TJB, 2 km HVDC to a converter
station near Minster—drives land-take on highly sensitive marshland.
RTC
asks the ExA to require a side-by-side alternatives matrix including Richborough
brownfield options to demonstrate whether Minster Marshes acquisition is
truly unavoidable.
3.
Environmental & Ecological Harm
Minster
Marshes is hydrologically fragile and functionally linked to Pegwell Bay (SSSI/SPA/Ramsar/NNR/MCZ). Loss, fragmentation and disturbance to wetland
ecosystems and migratory bird routes (EAF) risks irreversible damage.
Request:
ExA to test the Applicant’s HRA and in-combination assessment rigorously.
4.
Flood Risk, Hydrology & Drainage
Raising
platforms, piling and extensive drainage works increase land needs and may
alter groundwater pathways.
Relevant
evidence: Kent Drainage Strategy & Surface Water Flood Risk
Technical Note lodged in the Examination.
Request:
Demonstrate that drainage-related land-take cannot be reduced, and provide restoration
guarantees for temporarily occupied areas.
5.
Open Space, PRoW & Access
Where
land meets “open space” definitions or includes PRoW (e.g., Way of St
Augustine), the Applicant must justify closures/diversions and provide
functional exchange land if required.
6.
Negotiations & Good Faith
Applicant
should table a Schedule of Negotiations, including discussions with TDC
(hoverport access), KCC, IDB, Kent Wildlife Trust, and local councils. Some
acquisition appears avoidable if agreements are reached.
7.
Funding & Restoration
RTC
requests confirmation that the Funding Statement covers:
Restoration of marshland after temporary possession;
Worst-case drainage/flood risk design scenarios.
This is required under CA Guidance.
The
recordings and transcripts of the OpenFloor Hearing 3 Tuesday 24 March 2026, CompulsoryAcquisition Hearing 2 Wednesday 25 March 2026 and IssueSpecific Hearing 3 Wednesday 25 March – Friday 27 March 2026 have been
published.