nuclear-news

The News That Matters about the Nuclear Industry Fukushima Chernobyl Mayak Three Mile Island Atomic Testing Radiation Isotope

North Carolina Environment Chief aims to restrict solar power, promote nuclear power!

Buy politicians

Flag-USANC environmental chief backs restriction on solar farms, incentives for nuclear plants. WRAL.com By Laura Leslie 28 Jan 16 RALEIGH, N.C— The solar industry has blossomed in North Carolina since lawmakers granted solar farms tax breaks nine years ago as part of renewable energy standards that require utilities to get a portion of their power from renewable sources.

 North Carolina ranks fourth nationally in solar energy capacity, and the industry employs about 5,600 people in the state, according to the Solar Energy Industries Association. Capitol Broadcasting Co., the parent company of WRAL, operates a solar farm near Garner.
 Now, critics of solar are trying to rein in the industry by rewriting state laws, and the head of the state Department of Environmental Quality is leading the charge, pushing the state Energy Policy Council to recommend some major changes.
 One proposal discussed Wednesday would require a state permit for any new solar farm. That would give the state the final say on whether a property owner can lease his or her land for solar. It would also require a bond for eventual removal of the equipment……..

Brian O’Hara, senior vice president of Chapel Hill-based Strata Solar, said the state and other stakeholders have already drafted a model ordinance to help local officials negotiate. He said the solar industry wasn’t consulted about the proposed state permit.

 “We’ve learned lot as an industry over the last couple of years,” O’Hara said. “We’ve grown dramatically, and there is a forum for looking at best practices around permitting, but I think that forum should include all the stakeholders.”
 A second proposal would redefine the state’s renewable energy standard to include nuclear energy. The proposed “clean energy standard” would even allow incentives for new nuclear plants, which van der Vaart said are needed to back up less dependable sources such as solar…….

Chatham County homeowner Sharon Garbutt, who lives 17 miles from the Shearon Harris nuclear plant in southwest Wake County, told the panel

 “If it’s clean energy, why do they need sirens to warn people in the event of an accident at that plant?” Garbutt said.
 The Energy Policy Council delayed voting on the two recommendations after members voiced concerns about how the policy changes would affect the energy industry. They plan to tweak the proposals and and discuss them again at their next meeting in March.  http://www.wral.com/nc-environmental-chief-backs-restriction-on-solar-farms-incentives-for-nuclear-plants/15284709/#KVmGgSsaF4GTTe9e.99

January 28, 2016 - Posted by | politics, USA

No comments yet.

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.