Utility begins construction of grid-supply project at
Parklands Landfill in Bordentown, avoids use of farmland or open space
Public
Service Electric & Gas yesterday began building a 10.14-megawatt solar farm
at the closed Parklands Landfill in Bordentown, which will be the biggest
system of solar arrays yet to be built in New Jersey by the utility.
The
solar system at the capped former garbage dump complies with an initiative that
aims to shift large grid-supply projects, which deliver power directly to the
grid, to landfills and brownfields. The latter are unused manufacturing sites
that remain idle, in some cases because the expense of cleaning up pollution on
the property.
The
new policy, established under a revised Energy Master Plan adopted by the
Christie administration, steers this type of project away from being built on
farmland and other open space in a state rapidly losing both. Beyond preserving
open space, large grid-supply projects typically produce power at lower costs
than smaller solar systems on homes and businesses.
PSE&G
has been the most aggressive of the state’s utilities in trying to redevelop
brownfields and landfills, having done so even before its Solar 4 All program was approved by the New Jersey Board of
Public Utilities in May 2013. The utility will invest $247 million
in the projects, most of which will be spent on landfill and brownfield
systems.
The
Parklands project will utilize 40 acres of landfill to build a solar farm
capable of powering 2,000 homes annually. It is the biggest solar farm yet
undertaken by PSE&G in the state, but that distinction may not last long.
The utility also is planning to build a 11.8-megawatt solar system on the
former Kinsley garbage dump, once a national superfund site.
“Landfills
like Parklands offer prime opportunities for large-scale solar development that
benefits New Jersey and our customers,’’ said Joe Forline, vice president of
customers solutions for PSE&G. “We can convert this property into a
productive asset that adds to New Jersey’s inventory of renewable-energy
resources without reducing the state’s open space.”
So
far, PSE&G has developed solar systems on four former brownfields in
Trenton, Edison, Linden, and Hackensack under a previous settlement with the
BPU, as well as a landfill in the Meadowlands in Kearny.
Once
the Parklands Service Farm is up and running, it will mark the sixth brownfield
or former dump to be utilized for solar projects capable of generating more
than 20 megawatts of electricity, enough to power about 3,000 homes annually.
Eventually,
the utility will end up converting four or five former landfills into solar
systems, according to Fran Sullivan, a spokesman for PSE&G. All told, with
projects planned for brownfield sites, the solar farms would produce about 42
megawatts of capacity, he said. According to the settlement with the BPU, the projects
are to be in service sometime in 2016.
Prior
to the settlement with the BPU on the program, the Division of Rate Counsel and
business interests questioned whether ratepayers, who end up paying for the
projects, could afford it given other large utility projects either pending or
approved by the regulatory agency.
In
May, the BPU approved a $1.2 billion program by PSE&G
to harden its power grid and reduce outages that occur during extreme storms,
such as Hurricane Sandy. Later in the summer, the utility filed a petition with
the agency seeking to spend $110 million on
energy-efficiency projects that would enable hospitals, multifamily housing
units, and governmental agencies to cut their bills by reducing energy
consumption.
But
the BPU staff minimized the cost of the large grid-supply projects, estimating
it would add only $4.50 to the average residential customer’s bill. Business
interests, representing manufacturers who require large amounts of energy to
maintain operations, argued the costs would be much higher for them.
Source: NJS
Spotlight
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