Major solar developers, conservation groups, agricultural organizations, environmental and environmental justice groups, and tribal entities announced their agreement to advance large-scale U.S. solar development while championing land conservation and supporting local community interests.
The agreement is the result of a 20-month “Solar Uncommon Dialogue” convened by Stanford’s Woods Institute for the Environment, the Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA), and The Nature Conservancy (TNC). It is meant to mark a major turning point in resolving conflicts over developing major U.S. solar projects and related conservation and community concerns.
Over the next 10 years, U.S. solar energy output is expected to increase five-fold – the rapid increase in utility-scale solar means that the industry must address various issues, including agricultural land conversion, wildlife and habitat impacts, and community engagement, Stanford’s Woods Institute for the Environment said. The Solar Uncommon Dialogue agreement stresses that the development of large solar projects must be transparent, equitable, and efficient and acknowledges that this will require many trade-offs.
Signatories to the Solar Uncommon Dialogue agreement have committed to the “3Cs”: climate, conservation, and community.
The signatories are convening six working groups that will address key issues and opportunities including community engagement, siting-related risk assessment and decision-making, energy and agricultural technologies, tribal relations, and policy solutions.
These working groups will focus on advancing the 3Cs via public participation practices, solar siting mechanisms, regulation, financial incentives, information tools, and other means. The goal is to create best practices that solar companies, local governments, and other stakeholders can use to effectively site solar projects.
Source: https://www.renewableenergyworld.com/
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