Biomass Rejected in Favor of Solar in Springfield, VT

-  by Susan Small­heer, July 17, 2014, Rut­land Herald

North Spring­field, Vt. — Out with bio­mass, in with solar panels.

Win­stan­ley Enter­pris­es announced Wednes­day that it was seek­ing state approval to build five, 500-kilo­watt solar arrays in the North Spring­field Indus­tri­al Park.

Some of the land that will be used was ear­li­er pro­posed to be the site of the ill-fat­ed North Spring­field Sus­tain­able Ener­gy Project, which was reject­ed by state reg­u­la­tors ear­li­er this year. The bio­mass plant would have burned tons of wood­chips a year to pro­duce 35 megawatts of electricity.

The devel­op­ers of the project could not be reached for com­ment Wednesday.

But accord­ing to a news release sent out ear­li­er in the day, it is a joint project of Win­stan­ley Entepris­es LLC, of Con­cord, Mass., Green Lantern Devel­op­ment LLC, of Water­bury and Pow­er­smith Farm Inc., of Guilford.

But accord­ing to the three groups’ news release, the five arrays would total 2.5 megawatts of elec­tric­i­ty, and rep­re­sent approx­i­mate­ly $8 mil­lion in cap­i­tal investment.

By com­par­i­son, the bio­mass plant was esti­mat­ed to cost upward of $150 million.

“This is very excit­ing for us and for our poten­tial partners/offtakers. The Spring­field Com­mu­ni­ty Solar projects are a great exam­ple of envi­ron­men­tal eco­nom­ic devel­op­ment,” said Adam Win­stan­ley, prin­ci­pal of Win­stan­ley Enter­pris­es, in a pre­pared statement.

Win­stan­ley Enter­pris­es recent­ly built a solar facil­i­ty in Brattleboro.

The release, with­out being spe­cif­ic, said that the solar pow­er and “util­i­ty sav­ings” would go to “local schools, munic­i­pal­i­ties and hospitals.”

Win­stan­ley, whose firm bought the for­mer Fel­lows Corp. build­ing sev­er­al years ago and reha­bil­i­tat­ed it, defend­ed using the lots in the indus­tri­al park for ener­gy generation.

“We believe that com­mu­ni­ty-focused net-metered solar is the high­est and best use for that land,” the release stated.

Bob Flint, exec­u­tive direc­tor of the Spring­field Region­al Devel­op­ment Corp., said the solar project would be going next to Winstanley’s busi­ness facil­i­ty in the North Spring­field Indus­tri­al Park.

“It’s not the prime land in the park. It’s where the bio­mass plant would have gone. The solar array will sta­bi­lize the long-term oper­a­tion of the build­ing,” Flint said, refer­ring to what Win­stan­ley now calls 36 Pre­ci­sion Drive.

“They have a very suc­cess­ful project in Brat­tle­boro,” he said, refer­ring to Winstanley’s 2‑megawatt solar project along Inter­state 91.

Win­stan­ley Solar said it plans on fil­ing indi­vid­ual project appli­ca­tions to the Ver­mont Pub­lic Ser­vice Board over the next few months, and said that the first project may be oper­a­tional by late 2014 or ear­ly 2015.

There is already a large solar instal­la­tion in the North Spring­field Indus­tri­al Park owned by IVEK Corp., which was built in 2010.


Posted

in

by


EJ Communities Map

Map of Coal and Gas Facilities

We are mapping all of the existing, proposed, closed and defeated dirty energy and waste facilities in the US. We are building a network of community groups to fight the facilities and the corporations behind them.

Related Projects

Watch Us on YouTube