Protecting the environment through smart solar choices

Category: Stormwater (Page 4 of 4)

Mapping stormwater runoff

Large- or utility-scale solar projects are defined as those that produce over 10 MW of energy.

In Virginia, the average size of solar projects completed so far is 11 acres per megawatt. For a 10-MW project, this translates to 110 acres of land, at least, that will be covered by solar projects, not including extra acres of streams, wetlands, or other sensitive areas. And the average number of solar panels per megawatt is 3,500, resulting in 35,000 solar panels that would cover those 110 acres.

However, the average size of solar projects currently under construction in Virginia is 89 MW, or at least 979 acres per project (often more). And the average size of solar projects still in various stages of planning, from early to advanced, is 102 MW, or at least 1,100 acres per project (and often more).

Because solar panels are impermeable, they produce significant amounts of stormwater and runoff both during and after construction. This runoff flows onto neighboring properties as well as into streams, lakes, and sensitive watersheds.

In Virginia, 60 percent of the land area is in the Chesapeake Bay watershed. Rivers and streams in the remaining 40 percent flow into North Carolina’s Albemarle Sound or the New River basin (in both Virginia and North Carolina).

One of the three main sources of damage to Virginia’s streams, river, and the Chesapeake Bay are stormwater sediment as well as nitrogen and phosphorus.

Sediment from stormwater and runoff damages waterways and the Bay by turning water cloudy.

These maps illustrate just how many acres will be used for utility-scale solar projects in the Chesapeake Bay watershed and the river basins in southern Virginia:

Utility-scale solar & the Chesapeake Bay

One concern of moving toward utility-scale solar that is not often discussed is its potential damage to the ecological health of the Chesapeake Bay. Sixty percent of Virginia’s land mass is in the Chesapeake Bay watershed, meaning that anything going into those rivers and streams is eventually deposited in the Bay. The challenge with utility-scale solar is that stormwater, run-off, and erosion have proven to be a significant concern in every large-scale solar project constructed in Virginia so far. (This television report about Louisa County is just one example.)

The Chesapeake Bay Foundation has long worked to improve the ecological health of the Bay, including focusing on the damage caused by excess sedimentation flows into the bay. (Visit its website to learn more about how you can help!)

This map shows the counties in the Bay’s watershed and how much utility-scale solar is projected for each one, based on what solar developers have filed with electricity grid regulators. In all, this represents over 220,000 acres that will be covered by impermeable solar panels, which will worsen the stormwater and run-off problems already experienced to date.

TV: Virginia farmers say Dominion is destroying their land

This television news report by Richmond-based WTVR addresses concerns by two Louisa County landowners about excess runoff and flooding caused by the construction of a large industrial-scale solar project near their property.

Access the published report that accompanied the video with this link.

“How Virginia farmers claim Dominion is destroying their land: ‘It’s pretty catastrophic’,” WTVR, 5 Oct 2021, by Laura French

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