Georgia county rejects $300M solar farm planned next to vital bear habitat

A proposal to build a $300 million solar power project next to a wildlife area inhabited by the state’s most isolated black bear population was dealt a major blow Tuesday, after a central Georgia county commission voted to reject the plan over environmental concerns.

As the price of solar has become more affordable and concerns about climate change grow, some utilities, electric membership cooperatives and technology giants are looking to draw more of their energy from the sun. But the board of commissioners in Houston County, south of Macon, voted unanimously to disapprove a rezoning request for the project, known as SR Robins, which would have been one of the largest solar installations in the state.

Silicon Ranch, a Nashville-based solar developer behind the project, had asked the county to grant an exception so it could install solar panels on parts of more than 4,600 acres zoned for agriculture. The company said it planned to fence off and install panels on 2,100 of those acres, leaving the rest vegetated while preserving 700 acres of wetlands on the site. Atlanta Journal Constitution

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