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Growing Solar, Protecting Nature

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Growing Solar, Protecting Nature

Mass Audubon and Harvard Forest recently released their report “Growing Solar, Protecting Nature,” exploring strategies for limiting environmental impacts of ground-mount solar development in Massachusetts. EER contributed to the report by modeling the economic buildout of ground-mount solar required to meet net-zero emissions in Massachusetts by 2050 under different land use scenarios. EER’s analysis builds on the modeling we performed for the Massachusetts Clean Energy and Climate Plan for 2025/2030 and 2050 and leverages methodology we developed in the various Power of Place studies performed with The Nature Conservancy.

Researchers at Harvard Forest used GIS analysis to create three different ground-mount solar potential scenarios, each representing a different degree of forest and natural ecosystem protection. The least-protective Current Siting scenario identified over 1 million acres of land in Massachusetts suitable for solar development. The Protecting Nature—Mid-Impact scenario limited that potential to 94,000 acres, and the Protecting Nature—Low Impact scenario further limited potential to 38,000 acres.

Some key findings of EER’s energy system modeling under these three scenarios are:

The full report is available here and includes Mass Audubon and Harvard Forest’s policy recommendations for minimizing land impacts of solar development in Massachusetts.