Scott Cameron, Vice-Chair of the NVSWCD Board of Directors,
spoke to the Potomac Watershed Roundtable at our most recent meeting. His topic
was the Environmental Considerations of Utility Scale Solar “Farms.” The article below is a summary of his
talk.
Virginia’s utility scale solar development was stimulated initially
(as intended) by the statutory requirement of the Virginia Clean Economy Act
(VCEA). The 2020 VCEA is the state’s law
outlining a path to decarbonize the electric grid by 2050. VCEA requires the
Commonwealth to retire its natural gas power plants by 2045 (Dominion) and 2050
(Appalachian Power). It also requires utilities to develop more than
16,000MW of renewable energy by 2035.
However, the demand for renewable energy grew exponentially
due to the demands from data centers located primarily in Northern Virginia in
the Potomac River Basin. In the stampede to build utility scale solar a series
of issues have arisen. The developers of these utility scale solar came to
Virginia from desert locations where the land was open and unused. In Virginia
solar developers are cutting down forests and converting prime farmland. These
lands had provided green infrastructure to manage stormwater, allowed
groundwater to be recharged, provided water quality benefits, and fish and
wildlife habitat.
According to Mr. Cameron, the acreage permitted for utility
scale solar developments in Virginia is growing at an average of 77% per year
based on a regression model. In real life it takes 5-12 acres to create 1 megawatt
of solar generating capacity. So that under the VCEA that would 317,000 acres
would be converted to solar by 2045. However, those solar farms only generate
power when the sun shines and data centers, the driving force of the entire
power structure in Virginia these days, operate a flat demand 24/7. Today, data
centers represent 21% of Dominion Energy’s Virginia power demand and are
forecast to be 40% by 2030.
To power data centers with renewable power, batter storage
will have to be built to power the data centers at night and when it is
overcast (remember it rains an average of 44 inches a year in Virginia). The
charge the batteries additional solar developments will have to be built.
According to an analysis by the Piedmont Environmental Council (PEC) the data
center demand for power drives a loss of about 1,500,000 acres by 2050,
assuming no additional nuclear or natural gas to keep the data centers
operating after dark.
According to VCU, about 61% of the roughly 30,000 acres of agriculture
land that has be used so far for solar projects is “highly suitable cropland.”
In addition, as of 2023, more than 10,000 acres of forest land have already
been lost to the utility scale solar. However, under the Chesapeake Bay Agreement
with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the other Chesapeake
Bay states, Virginia owes the region 48,000 acres of new forest by 2025, but
have only planted 6,600 acres of trees. On net, we are 3,400 acres further from Virginia’s tree
planting goal than we were in 2017. We are going backward in our environmental progress.
In addition, as rain storms intensify due to the changing climate, and green infrastructure of forests, and open land are removed; storm water flooding and sediment flushing into streams, rivers and ultimately the Chesapeake Bay increases. This is all compounded by the fact that utility scale solar developers came to Virginia from the dessert with no experience handling stormwater. Our wet (and getting wetter) environment requires Virginia to have stormwater regulations. However, according to the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) 69% of existing solar facilities had regulatory “issues” with stormwater and erosion control as of April 2023. Solar stormwater pollution undercuts the urban investment Virginia has made. Last year NOVA invested $135 million in stormwater management. Over the next five years Virginia is budgeted to spend a billion dollars on stormwater management.
Solar Project from ESE |
Mr. Cameron suggests that Virginia needs to change the
incentives in the state law. Virginia needs to implement disincentives in
siting utility scale solar developments in forests and prime farmland. Promote “agro-voltaics”
which are spacing the solar panels further apart and higher to allow sheep grazing
and crop cultivation. (funny note in experiments with grazing only sheep were
successful, the cows knocked down the solar panels and the goats climbed on
them.) Mr. Cameron went on to suggest
that we need to incentive solar siting on brownfields, residential and
commercial structures, an parking lots. Delegate Paul Krizek has bills in this
legislative session: HB 197. HB 198, and HB 199.
DEQ is also working on the problem. DEQ’s stormwater
Guidance Memo 22-2012 issued in November 2022 goes into effect at the end of
this year and requires more stringent stormwater controls for utility scale
solar that has not yet been connected to the grid by 12/31/2024. In addition, DEQ
established a work group as required by HB 206 to assist with
developing regulations under its small renewable energy permit-by-rule (PBR)
program, addressing ways to avoid, minimize, and/or mitigate damage to prime
agricultural soil and forest caused by the construction and operation of
renewable energy solar projects. DEQ must promulgate these regulations no
later than the end of 2024. Make sure to comment on the regulations.
Solar carports at METRO |
Dominion Solar Development |
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