Protecting the environment through smart solar choices

Category: Solar projects (Page 3 of 10)

Weekly update

We’ve added a new section to the website on ordinances and regulations, and posted several articles in The Latest News:

Charlotte County: massive solar project deferred (for now)

A massive 800-MW industrial solar project proposed in Charlotte County has been temporarily deferred. Key points from this article include:

  • An outside consulting firm recommended deferral until certain questions about the huge solar array can be resolved.
  • Yet another utility-scale solar project is on the table: a 220-MW project that would cover over 2,000 acres.
  • The developer, SolUnesco, claims that the project will bring in over $175 million in “labor income and economic output.” (However, consistent with other solar claims, the company fails to provide specific details on how that figure was calculated.)
  • One speaker questioned how wetlands, forests, and farmlands will be protected by the county, in light of large solar projects such as these.
  • County staff noted that the application would allow the developer to include lands of natural, scenic, agricultural, archaeological or historical significance within the project lines without additional review or approval by the Board.
  • The project violates the Charlotte County solar ordinance which calls for no more than 3% of the land area in a given 5-mile radius to be used for utility-scale solar projects.
  • The developer does not want to post a bond for decommissioning. (Decommissioning bonds are critical to ensure that the developer is held accountable for removing all panels and restoring the land; otherwise, all these costs fall on county taxpayers.)
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DEQ issues new stormwater regs

The Department of Environmental Quality issued new stormwater regs that limit the amount of runoff allowed by solar panels. Solar panels are impermeable surfaces that concentrate the flow of rainwater and lead to excessive runoff and flooding. This runoff flows into Virginia waterways and bays, including the Chesapeake Bay and the James River watershed, endangering plants and animals.

In addition to the dangers posed by impermeable solar panels, utility-scale solar project construction sites also produce far more runoff than cropland or forested land. DEQ estimates that large construction sites, such as utility-scale solar sites, will produce 200 times MORE stormwater runoff than agricultural land and 2,000 times MORE than forested land.

Look at this photo and you’ll see why:

Look at the land in between the solar panels, and you’ll see nothing but dirt and a few weeds. Rainwater flows from the panels onto the ground and then directly into our waterways.

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