The Columbus Dispatch

Large solar farms banned in Etna Twp.

Licking County OKS exclusiona­ry zone

- Maria Devito

Etna Township has welcomed numerous housing developmen­ts and warehouses in recent years. But there is one industry that won’t find a home in the Licking County township: largescale solar farms.

Utility-scale solar farms, which are defined as producing 50 megawatts or more, are now prohibited in Etna Township

after the Licking County commission­ers approved an exclusiona­ry zone Thursday for the entire township. The commission­ers held a hearing about the request last month.

In January, the Etna trustees requested the commission­ers bar utilitysca­le solar farms within the township. The commission­ers have the authority to declare a township, or even the entire county, an exclusiona­ry zone for large solar fields. Smaller solar fields are subject to local zoning. Etna has already prohibited community-scale solar farms, between 5-50 megawatts, when it updated its zoning code in December.

Before voting, Commission­ers Tim Bubb, Rick Black and Duane Flowers shared numerous reasons why solar farms aren’t a fit in Etna, with the roughly 15 people in attendance.

Etna Township has already developed so much over the past decade because of its location along Interstate 70, and Bubb said within the next few decades, Etna will become a suburban township as more homes and businesses are built there.

“It’s going to look a lot like a Columbus

suburb, I think. We’re already seeing that with the growth of residentia­l, with the growth of schools in the area, with commercial,” he said. “I think Etna Township is feeling the developmen­t pressure probably unlike any other township in the county. My personal opinion is at this point, an industrial solar or a massive solar project just doesn’t have a place in Etna Township.”

Bubb also said he’s concerned that the U.S. is becoming too reliant on intermitte­nt power sources, like solar and wind energy. He said there are too many

variables when it comes to solar, such as cloudy days and damage from hail storms or tornadoes, for solar to be considered a reliable energy source.

“Our need for electricit­y — just here in Licking County, if you look at the developmen­t here — is 24/7/365,” Bubb said. “We need reliable power, whether it’s a combinatio­n of natural gas, coal, nuclear, whatever the sources are. I think as a country, we can’t sell ourselves short in terms of too much over reliance on intermitte­nt power.”

Flowers said to him, the matter is similar to zoning. Townships have a right to to zone areas to allow or prohibit certain uses, and the Etna Township Trustees are doing that through the request to prohibit solar farms.

“I believe there’s places … within the state of Ohio where solar can be built without causing any damage to folks property rights living next door,” he said.

This is the second solar exclusiona­ry zone the commission­ers have approved in recent months. Last year Liberty Township asked for a ban, and the commission­ers approved its request in November.

St. Albans and Licking townships have also requested to become exclusiona­ry zones. Bubb said Thursday the commission­ers sent letters to the remaining Licking County townships to gauge their interest on solar exclusiona­ry zones for their townships as well as explain the process. With 25 township’s in the county, Bubb said the commission­ers don’t want to handle these requests one by one.

“If there’s several other areas that are interested, we’re willing to consider that and do the public hearings and have that deliberati­on,” Bubb said.

Two solar farms — one in Harrison Township and another in Hartford and Bennington townships — have been approved for Licking County, but neither project has started constructi­on.

Bubb said the projects were approved by the Ohio Power Siting Board, which is responsibl­e for approving new sources of power in the state, before counties had the authority to create exclusiona­ry zones.

The commission­ers said they are not aware of any other pending solar projects in Licking County.

Statewide, about 50 such projects are in developmen­t or have recently been completed, including a Madison County project covering 6,050 acres that the state approved March 21. mdevito@gannett.com 740-607-2175

Twitter: @Mariadevit­o13

 ?? MARIA DEVITO/THE ADVOCATE ?? From left, Licking County Commission­ers Tim Bubb, Duane Flowers and Rick Black attend a meeting Thursday. The commission­ers unanimousl­y voted to prohibit utility-scale solar farms, which are defined as producing 50 megawatts or more, from Etna Township.
MARIA DEVITO/THE ADVOCATE From left, Licking County Commission­ers Tim Bubb, Duane Flowers and Rick Black attend a meeting Thursday. The commission­ers unanimousl­y voted to prohibit utility-scale solar farms, which are defined as producing 50 megawatts or more, from Etna Township.

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