The post you are reporting:
Land on Western Heights and at Farthingloe may not be for sale in the present CGI application.
If the planning application receives approval, however, then the land that CGI own in these two areas, once they have planning approval, would be worth immensely more.
At this point, CGI would sell the land to developers who'd build houses, hotel and conference centre, or CGI would sell the land in lots directly to potential house owners and a potential hotel owner.
All depends on whether their planning application is approved by DDC Planning.
As stated, if DDC Planning approve the application, CGI's land on W.H. and Farthingloe will increase in financial value by many, many times, to then be sold.
For CGI it is a speculative operation, one that would bring them lots of financial gain.
To market their product, they must make believe that they are acting in the interests of Dover's population, in reality they are a private speculative financial group with a heavy bank-loan to pay off.
They have recently stopped trading as a share-company, it would seem, according to information online in public domain, owing to financial losses.