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Ohio solar energy project with sheep farming scrapped due to opposition
Ohio solar energy project with sheep farming scrapped due to opposition

Yahoo

time21-03-2025

  • Business
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Ohio solar energy project with sheep farming scrapped due to opposition

COLUMBUS, Ohio (WCMH) — A solar energy project near Indian Lake that promised to combine photovoltaic panels with sheep farming, known as lambscaping or agrivoltaics, is no longer going forward. According to a news release, Open Road Renewables' Grange Solar Grazing Center has withdrawn its application for a Certificate of Environmental Compatibility and Public Need from the Ohio Power Siting Board (OPSB). How dismantling the Department of Education will affect Ohio schools Doug Herling, Vice President of Open Road Renewables, stated that the decision to withdraw was difficult, noting that the project was thoughtfully designed to balance environmental protection, agriculture, tourism and economic benefits for the community. 'All legitimate concerns about the project were addressed and the benefits would have been spread far and wide,' Herling said. 'Unfortunately, some community members were swayed by fears that were entirely unfounded.' On a website for the solar opposition organization, Indian Lake Advocacy Group, objections to the project included concerns about protecting and preserving wildlife, tourism, farmland, and historical landmarks. 'The disruption caused by years of construction, along with the loss of open landscapes and natural views, will diminish Indian Lake's appeal to boaters, anglers, campers, and tourists,' the group offered in a prewritten letter for supporters to send to the OSPB. 'Many businesses rely on tourism to survive, and a project of this scale threatens to drive visitors elsewhere, resulting in economic harm to our community.' The solar rival group also focused on infrastructure details and possible future owners of the agrivoltaic operation on its website to sway opinion against the project. 'What is the solar project? 2,600 acres full of 15 feet tall solar panels, inverters, driveways, racking poles, cables, and 7 feet tall fencing,' Indian Lake Advocacy Group posted on its site. 'Over 4,000 acres have been leased, so there is a potential for more if they get the necessary easements. This project … is being developed by Open Road Renewables, LLC out of Texas. They are just the developer and in most cases will sell to another company (often foreign-owned) before construction even starts.' Ohio reports first measles case of 2025 Criticizing the approval process, Herling stated that while the OPSB staff thoroughly vetted the project's plans, equivalent scrutiny of the opposition's claims did not exist. 'There is no such fact-checking of the onslaught of anti-solar propaganda, which caused local officials to make statements against solar,' said Herling. 'OPSB staff relied on those stated positions to declare the project not in the public interest, despite all of its benefits.' Wrapping up his statement, Herling thanked those who supported the project and reiterated the company's belief in the long-term benefits of renewable energy for the state's economy, environment, and communities. 'Opportunities like the Grange Solar Grazing Center do not come along often,' Herling said. 'The project would have brought jobs, wages, and millions of dollars in annual tax revenue to fund local schools and county and township services. 'The agrivoltaics plan would have created a new generation of sheep farmers. The drain tile plan would have improved drainage in the area. The vegetation management plan would have supported biodiversity, improved water quality, and reduced run-off. We wish all of these benefits could have come to fruition.' Herling told NBC4 that Open Road Renewables has two other agrivoltaic projects in Ohio. Frasier Solar is in Knox County and is awaiting a decision from the OPSB and Crossroads Solar, in Morrow County, is preparing to submit an application to the OPSB. How grocery stores are combatting SNAP benefit thefts in Ohio Additionally, Herling said the majority of farmers and landowners who signed on to partner with the project plan to continue farming. 'Others may develop the land into housing, mining, livestock facilities, or seek out other forms of electricity generation development such as nuclear or energy storage,' Herling said. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Another big Ohio solar project bites the dust
Another big Ohio solar project bites the dust

Yahoo

time07-03-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Another big Ohio solar project bites the dust

Months of proactive community engagement appeared to be paying off for the developer of the Grange Solar Grazing Center agrivoltaics project in central Ohio. Open Road Renewables knew it faced an uphill battle before the state energy-siting board, whose recent deference to local opponents has helped make Ohio one of the most challenging places in the country to build large solar arrays. So the company showed up early and often in Logan County, listening to residents' feedback and committing millions of dollars in donations for community investments. As public comments rolled into state regulators, the developer reviewed the submissions last month and found a clear majority of those weighing in supported its plan. The analysis filtered out hundreds of repeat comments, at least 140 of which came from just 16 people who mostly opposed the project. Optimism around Grange Solar lasted only days, however. On Feb. 21, staff at the Ohio Power Siting Board recommended denying the project's permit: 'Staff believes that any benefits to the local community are outweighed by the overwhelming documented public opposition and, therefore, the project would not serve the public interest, convenience, and necessity.' Open Road Renewables withdrew its application for Grange Solar late last week, making it at least the fifth large solar project in Ohio to be canceled over the past 15 months. The case highlights the power that local opponents have to block renewable energy projects in Ohio, even when they otherwise check all the boxes for regulatory approval. It also raises the question: What more can developers do? Open Road Renewables held listening sessions last spring for its up to 500-megawatt solar farm to learn about community concerns and address them even before applying for its permit. Beyond the $5 million in annual local tax revenue the development was expected to generate, the company committed $10 million in donations for a community center, public safety, a river cleanup, job training, and other programs. 'All legitimate concerns about the project were addressed and the benefits would have been spread far and wide,' Doug Herling, vice president of Open Road Renewables, said in an emailed statement. The section of the siting board staff's report that focuses on whether Grange Solar serves the public interest does not discuss local benefits. Nor does it address statewide public-interest issues, such as growing energy needs, efforts to cut greenhouse gas emissions, and projected positive economic impacts. The staff report also does not address conflict-of-interest issues and procedural problems raised by the developer about some of the local governments' filings. And it doesn't mention the company's analysis of public comments, showing that three-fourths of those who had commented on the project supported it. The staff recommendation also does not consider the merits of opponents' reasons for not wanting Grange Solar to move ahead. '[T]he dozens of pages of the [Power Siting Board] staff report represent rigorous analysis and thorough fact-checking of every aspect of Grange's planned project,' Herling said. 'But there is no such fact-checking of the onslaught of anti-solar propaganda, which caused local officials to make statements against solar.' Renewable energy developments face increasing headwinds across the country, often fueled by misinformation. Research released last June by Columbia University's Sabin Center for Climate Change Law identifies hundreds of projects encountering significant opposition across 47 states. And a July 2024 report from the watchdog organization Energy and Policy Institute lists multiple fossil-fuel companies with links to anti-renewable front groups and activists. Withdrawing the Grange Solar application was a difficult business decision, Herling said in a phone interview with Canary Media. Management at the company felt it could have eventually won, if not at the Ohio Power Siting Board then perhaps on appeal. But even if the company did prevail, it had no guarantee on how long that would take. And Grange Solar is not the only site Open Road Renewables has been working on. 'The decision to withdraw the application is not surprising when you consider the cost of the administrative proceedings, hearings, and appeals that lay ahead and the challenge of persuading the Ohio Power Siting Board to override the recommendation of its staff to deny the application,' said Matthew Eisenson, a lawyer with Columbia University's Sabin Center for Climate Change Law. He represented two landowners who had agreed to lease their property for the Grange Solar project. The Ohio Power Siting Board's staff report acknowledges that Grange Solar is exempt from terms in a 2021 law, Senate Bill 52, which let counties block most large new solar projects. Two representatives from the host county and townships would still have served as ad hoc siting board members for deciding the case. 'However, the [Power Siting Board] staff's recommendation to deny the application when the only purported defect was the existence of local opposition, particularly opposition from local government officials, is analogous to giving local government officials veto power,' Eisenson said. 'Our voices were heard,' said Aubrey Snapp, a representative of the Indian Lake Advocacy Group, which has opposed Grange Solar and applauded its demise in a Feb. 28 statement. Other stakeholders had very different reactions. The regulatory staff's recommendation to block the Grange Solar Grazing Center 'not only disregards the needs of Logan County workers and their families, but also squanders the potential for Logan County to become a leader in renewable energy and attract further investment,' said a statement from IBEW Local 32, the local chapter of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, which its lawyer in the case, Daniel Loud, provided to Canary Media. The union also found fault with the local government leaders who opposed the solar farm. 'Local decision-makers have a fundamental responsibility to prioritize the economic well-being of their communities. By rejecting the Grange Solar project, they have failed to uphold this responsibility and have jeopardized the livelihoods of countless workers and families.'

Proposed solar project discontinued
Proposed solar project discontinued

Yahoo

time01-03-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Proposed solar project discontinued

Feb. 28—LOGAN COUNTY — A proposed solar energy project in Logan County will not come to fruition. Open Road Renewables announced Friday that the Grange Solar Grazing Center will not be constructed as it is withdrawing its application to the Ohio Power Siting Board for a Certificate of Environmental Compatibility. According to a release from the company, this decision came in light of a recommendation from the OPSB staff to deny that application. Open Road Renewables Vice President Doug Herling said in a statement that the decision to withdraw was difficult given that the company worked to ensure that "all legitimate concerns about the project were addressed." "Unfortunately, some community members were swayed by fears that were entirely unfounded," he said in the statement. Herling also said that his company will continue to work to promote solar power as part of the state's energy production. Featured Local Savings

Dual-use of land for solar panels and farming can propel clean energy forward in Ohio
Dual-use of land for solar panels and farming can propel clean energy forward in Ohio

Yahoo

time24-02-2025

  • Science
  • Yahoo

Dual-use of land for solar panels and farming can propel clean energy forward in Ohio

Lettuce growing alongside a Solar panel array. (Photo courtesy of the National Renewable Energy Lab.) In a room where many held different views, community members found their voices and stood tall. One by one, they stepped forward to speak their truth about protecting our Earth and preserving the farmland that has sustained their families for generations. – MaryAnn Hubbard, describing the Eastern Cottontail Solar Project hearing in Fairfield County Despite the fact the scientific community is issuing strenuous warnings that humanity is running out of time to prevent a climate tipping point when deterioration begins spinning out of human control, the process of approving solar farms in Ohio has become bogged down in a debate about loss of farmland. 'Opposition has led developers to drop plans for at least four solar projects in Ohio within 15 months. Nationally, hundreds of renewable energy projects have faced significant opposition across 47 states,' according to an article from Columbia. But there is a dramatic shift taking place. When it becomes known that such farmland will NOT be lost but rather transformed into a dual use of solar and agriculture by what has become known as 'agrivoltaics,' the numbers are becoming stunningly reversed. An article just reposted in OCJ documents what can only be described as a 'game-changer.' At its project in Logan County, Open Road Renewables announced from the get-go that it was going to be based on agrivoltaics. Its wording: 'The Grange Solar Grazing Center ….. is a dual-use solar and grazing facility.' The result has been a remarkable change in comments submitted by the public, with supporters outnumbering the opponents by a four to one margin: 'Open Road Renewables reviewed more than 2,500 comments through Feb.11. and found 80% expressed support.' This finding places the following comment to NBC4 TV by opponents of the Frasier project into an entirely new perspective: 'The (global) warming is an issue and we need to work on that, but …. We need to think outside the box, it shouldn't be on prime farmland.' Such 'thinking outside the box' has already happened in a big way and is rapidly spreading around the world. Agrivoltaics has not only rapidly expanded to over 20 countries, but has now come into Ohio in a major way, bringing significant impact. In the U.S. there are already over 500 applications of agrivoltaics, with their success now propelling the concept toward a larger scale. Ohio is at a leading edge of that effort. The OSU agriculture school received a 1.6 million grant to research whether agrivoltaics can be scaled up to utility size projects. They are working with the Madison Fields Solar Project in Madison County. Due to its size, it has become one of the largest testing grounds in the country. Due to its ability to create a win-win with those concerned about loss of farmland, this new direction has been found to increase the chance of a solar project being approved. This became apparent in the Madison Fields project, and amplified even further in the larger Oak Run approval. The Ohio Power Siting Board went out of its way to actually *require* that: 'In its first year of operation, Oak Run must graze at least 1,000 sheep and grow crops on 2,000 acres…. Within eight years of operation, at least 70% of the farmable project area, or at least 4,000 acres, must include agrivoltaics.' There is no longer any rationale for the polarization that has existed. It is not just a 'win-win,' but actually a four way 'win-win-win-win.' The community 'wins' by receiving substantial funding for schools via a tax arrangement. The land owners 'win' by obtaining a major source of income. Those who favor agricultural use of land 'win' by having the land stay in food and grazing production. And the whole world plus future generations 'win' by having a clean and 100% renewable source of electricity. The support has now grown to expand beyond the previous partisan political divide. A bill in Congress to promote agrivoltaics as a win-win solution is now being championed by U.S. Sen. Chuck Grassley, a conservative Republican of Iowa. With agrivoltaics as an ally, the future has become bright for large scale solar. The strength of this rapidly spreading concept just became more visible in the recent public hearing about the Eastern Cottontail Solar Project in Fairfield County. The developer — EDF Renewables — wisely shifted its plan to incorporate sheep grazing back in October. Proponents of solar — sometimes outnumbered by those decrying 'loss of farmland' at previous hearings — had a very powerful counterpoint. No, the farmland is NOT going to be lost! Let us *together* celebrate and preserve the prime farmland of Ohio! As exemplified in the opening quote of this commentary, they testified with great confidence and vigor. When a moral concern about the future of humanity becomes combined with a very real solution at the practical level, the result is poignant. In Fairfield County, many were able to integrate both together. If this can continue, I have no doubt the tide will turn for solar in Ohio. It is worth noting that sometimes the 'loss of farmland' concern is genuine, but at other times it has been a manipulative ploy. ProPublica operates at the national level to engage in investigative journalism to advance the public interest. Its outstanding work has earned the highest award of journalism — the Pulitzer Prize. The idea of wealthy fossil fuel-connected corporations financing campaigns that distort information about clean energy projects in order to eliminate competition was determined by ProPublica to be of national significance. A video news story details the unfortunate effort by fossil fuel interests in Ohio to not only manipulate public hearings with the 'loss of farmland' claim but also local media outlets in the ongoing case of the Frasier project in Knox County. In order to assist the continuation of such efforts as the one in Fairfield County , this writer — who is also a video producer — has created a program about how the emergence of agrivoltaics has dramatically 'changed the equation' in Ohio. The title of that program: 'With a Changed National Landscape, Can 'Agrivoltaics' — The Co-Existence of Panels and Agriculture on the Same Land — Provide a Path Forward for Solar Energy in Ohio?' Here is the link. May it prove to be a useful resource that will be shared. Gary Houser is a long time clean energy advocate who has successfully achieved placement of solar projects and institutional commitments to clean electricity. In searching for ways to proceed forward despite the major shift at the federal level, he sees dual use 'agrivoltaics' as offering a very promising direction.

Rural Ohioans oppose solar farms, right? Not so, developer finds
Rural Ohioans oppose solar farms, right? Not so, developer finds

Yahoo

time20-02-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Rural Ohioans oppose solar farms, right? Not so, developer finds

Aerial view of a flock of sheep grazing in a solar farm with solar panels.(Getty Images.) This story was originally published by Canary Media. A new analysis shows that a clear majority of people submitting comments on a planned central Ohio solar farm support the project — a stark contrast with how opponents have portrayed public sentiment. Open Road Renewables, the developer seeking a permit to build the Grange Solar Grazing Center in Logan County, reviewed more than 2,500 comments submitted to the Ohio Power Siting Board through Feb. 11 regarding its permitting case. After accounting for repeat commenters who submitted multiple times, the company found 80% of commenters expressed support for its project. A project's popularity is a potential factor in site permit decisions, but how regulators use that information is the subject of a pending case before the Ohio Supreme Court. Until the question of how state regulators should measure ​'public interest' is resolved, solar advocates and developers say it's critical to closely examine public comments before drawing conclusions. 'Anyone can file 10 different comments, but if you're using that to determine public opinion, just based on nominally how many comments there are, that's kind of missing the mark,' said Doug Herling, vice president for Open Road Renewables. Herling took issue with people ​'gaming' the system, submitting multiple comments to make it appear that the project has more naysayers. The company's analysis identified more than 600 repeat comments that should not be considered in attempts to quantify support or opposition to the project. As of early February, it found 16 individuals who collectively submitted more than 140 comments, mostly opposing Grange Solar. Solar opponents, some with ties to fossil fuel groups, have used town halls and other forums to portray utility-scale solar projects as deeply unpopular in rural Ohio. Sustained opposition has led developers to drop plans for at least four large solar developments in Ohio within the past 15 months. Nationally, research released last June by Columbia University's Sabin Center for Climate Change Law documents hundreds of renewable energy projects facing significant opposition across 47 states. Permitting in Ohio has become especially contentious since passage of a 2021 law that adds hurdles for siting most wind and solar projects over 50 megawatts. Under the law, counties can block new utility-scale projects before they even get to the state siting board. The law doesn't apply to fossil fuel or nuclear power projects. The 2021 law exempts Grange Solar and some other projects because they were already in grid operator PJM's queue when the law took effect. However, Grange Solar isn't exempt from a provision in the law calling for two local ad hoc board members to join the state siting board's seven voting members when it deliberates on the project. Ohio law requires any new generation project to meet eight criteria. They include consideration of impacts on the environment, water conservation, and agricultural land. Other factors include whether a facility ​'will serve the interests of electric system economy and reliability' and ​'the public interest, convenience, and necessity.' Ohio statutes don't spell out what ​'public interest' means, and the power siting board declined environmental advocates' requests to define the term when other rule revisions took effect last year. Yet the board has denied multiple permit applications for solar projects based entirely or primarily on a large percentage of public comments or local governments opposing them. The developer in one such case, Vesper Energy, challenged the siting board's popularity-contest approach in denying its Kingwood Solar project. The case is now before the Ohio Supreme Court, with oral arguments set for March 13. That backdrop prompted Open Road Renewables to take a closer look at the comments in the Grange Solar case. 'Given that the siting board puts a weight on local public opinion and any resolutions made by local public bodies, we just felt it deserved that scrutiny,' Herling said. The company submitted an initial analysis of public comments through Feb. 4 and found three-quarters of 806 unique commenters in the docket favored the project, compared with one-fourth in opposition. Among the commenters within Logan County, supporters still outnumbered opponents by about two to one. A flurry of filings more than doubled the total number of comments, and the developer prepared an updated analysis through Feb. 11. Among nearly 2,000 commenters, supporters outnumbered opponents four to one. Opinion was more divided within Logan County, but allies still exceeded critics, Open Road Renewables' most recent analysis said. Supporters' reasons for backing the project include jobs and economic benefits. Commenters also approved of the company's commitment to minimizing impacts on the environment while preserving soil and drainage and screening panels from public view. 'The economic impact is undeniable — jobs for our neighbors and much-needed funding for our schools and public services,' wrote Russells Point resident Sharon Devault in a Jan. 10 comment. ​'Misinformation about solar energy concerns me. Let's base decisions on facts, not fear.' 'I support solar energy because of the price of fossil fuels and the problems with them,' said Logan County resident Roger Blank in a Dec. 10 comment. Some supporting commenters also dismissed project foes' claims that Grange Solar would hurt tourism in the area. A Jan. 13 comment by Sharon Lenhart said they would continue to visit Logan County and Indian Lake. ​'The substantial investment in public services will likely make the area a more attractive destination,' Lenhart wrote. The Ohio Chamber of Commerce also filed a supportive comment on the Grange Solar project, reflecting the business group's more vocal advocacy for clean energy as a tool for economic development and grid resiliency. Yet more comments have been submitted in the Grange Solar case, including additional duplicates and comments by opponents who have already weighed in. For example, Logan County resident Shelley Wammes contributed 14 comments in a Feb. 12 packet and another on Feb. 14. Wammes, who did not respond to questions sent via email by Canary Media, also filed 13 comments against the project last August and September. 'I am happy to see that Grange is really trying to take these things into account and recognize that there is support for this project within the community and that it shouldn't just be outweighed by [a] few loud voices who are shouting a lot of misinformation,' said Shayna Fritz, executive director of the Ohio Conservative Energy Forum. In her view, people's ability to lease their land for energy projects is a property rights issue. Nolan Rutschilling, managing director of energy policy for the Ohio Environmental Council, said it's important that state regulators consider the substance of comments, not just use them as a straw poll for measuring popularity. Instead of just counting comments, ​'each perspective and comment must be considered for its substance — especially the truth of any claims — and who the comment represents,' Rutschilling said. In another solar permitting case last summer, half the unique arguments presented during local public hearings lacked factual support, said Heidi Gorovitz Robertson, a professor at Cleveland State University College of Law who served as an expert witness for the Ohio Environmental Council. In her view, numbers can provide a sense of the extent of support for particular arguments opposing or supporting a project. But if 1,000 people support a specific point for or against a development, that's still just one issue for the power siting board's consideration. An argument based on false information may not deserve weight at all. Other comments are just statements of opinion without evidentiary support, she noted. 'The value of the arguments is as important, or arguably much more important, than the numbers,' Robertson said. ​'All of this, of course, assumes the agency really wants to know.' The power siting board's staff investigation of the Grange Solar project is due by March 3, and the evidentiary hearing is set to start on April 7. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

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