Backed by Illinois energy legislationBattery energy storage is supported by Illinois state energy legislation
Counties / Marshall County / Henry
The town of Henry on the Illinois River in Marshall County offers grid access through nearby transmission infrastructure. With 300 MW of battery projects queued in the area, riverside agricultural parcels present a compelling lease opportunity.
Estimated Annual Lease
$40,000
5 MW project (~0.5 acres)
Nearby Substations
5
Up to 300 MW capacity
County
Marshall
Marshall County, IL
The Henry area has 5 ComEd substations with up to 300 MW of capacity for battery storage interconnection. Key connection points include:
Properties within 2-5 miles of these substations are the most viable for battery storage leases. Our team evaluates proximity, feeder infrastructure, and available capacity for each property at no cost.
Battery storage developers pay per megawatt of installed capacity. Here's what landowners near Henry could earn:
| Project Size | Annual Lease | Land Needed | 25-Year Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2 MW | $16,000/yr | ~0.2 acres | $500,000 |
| 5 MW | $40,000/yr | ~0.5 acres | $1,250,000 |
| 10 MW | $80,000/yr | ~1 acres | $2,500,000 |
| 20 MW | $160,000/yr | ~2 acres | $5,000,000 |
Fill out a short form with your property location near Henry. Takes about two minutes.
We evaluate your property's proximity to Henry-area substations, available interconnection capacity, and grid infrastructure.
If your property qualifies, we present lease terms with annual payment amounts, duration, and escalation schedule.
Once signed, the developer handles permitting and construction. You start receiving lease payments.
If your property is within a few miles of a ComEd substation with available interconnection capacity in the Henry area, it may qualify. Marshall County has 5 substations with up to 300 MW of capacity. Submit a free assessment to find out.
Battery storage needs only 0.2-2 acres — far less than solar. A typical 5 MW project uses about 0.5 acres. The rest of your property stays in production.
No. The installation is a small fenced area — typically the size of a few shipping containers on a concrete pad. Farmers report no impact on planting, harvesting, drainage, or equipment access.
None. The developer covers everything — permitting, construction, equipment, maintenance, and insurance. The assessment is also free with no obligation.
Find out if your property qualifies for a battery storage lease. Free assessment, no obligation.