General Industry News

New Mapping Tool for Developing Renewable Energy

According to the EPA and DOE, California’s contaminated areas are prime locations for solar and wind power. They are providing a new mapping tool to show those areas.

The U.S. EPA, in partnership with the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory, announced an online mapping tool that enables users to find contaminated and degraded properties in California ideal for renewable energy redevelopment.

The Renewable Energy Siting Tool, funded by EPA, screens approximately 11,000 contaminated, degraded or cleaned up federal and state sites in California, such as brownfields, Superfund sites, and former mines. The tool provides aerial perspectives while overlaying streamlined information on the site’s clean energy development potential.

“Solar, wind and geothermal power projects may be the best use for certain tracts of impaired lands,” said Jared Blumenfeld, EPA’s Regional Administrator for the Pacific Southwest. “By finding these properties and putting them back into productive use, we can reduce our carbon footprint while meeting the state’s energy needs.”

“California has long recognized the need to reuse underdeveloped sites and create renewable energy sources,” said Debbie Raphael, Director of the State of California's Department of Toxic Substances Control. “This tool allows people to make informed decisions to do both and turn underused land into potential sources of renewable energy redevelopment.”

Highlighted are 75 high-priority sites for utility-scale renewable energy, as well as thousands of smaller-scale development parcels. The EPA intends the tool to help local governments and industry prioritize the development of contaminated areas.
The Renewable Energy Siting Tool is being released in support of the EPA’s national Repowering America’s Lands initiative.

To view the mapping tool and associated resources, click here.

For more information on EPA’s “Repowering America’s Lands Initiative,” click here.

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