East Drumore Township solar farm grows to $65M
Will be biggest project on East Coast
  • Solar farm location

By AD CRABLE
Quarryville
Updated Sep 01, 2010 22:18

The solar farm approved by East Drumore Township supervisors last week will be the largest on the East Coast, according to Gov. Ed Rendell, who announced Wednesday a $1 million grant to make the project possible.

The project, which includes 4,500 solar panels erected on 78 acres of the farm of Gerald and Linda Kreider at Deaver Road and Route 272, will cost $65 million and produce 15 megawatts of electricity for PPL.

When proposed in January, Radnor-based Community Energy spoke of a $20 million project to produce 6 megawatts of electricity.

Fifteen megawatts is enough energy to power 3,600 to 4,500 homes.

Ten-year-old Community Energy is one of the leading renewable-energy companies in the East, providing "green" power to 20 utilities. It has wind farms in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New Hampshire and Illinois.

The company said it is turning to solar energy and is in the permitting stage with projects in Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Virginia.

East Drumore supervisors approved a conditional-use application for the project after months of review. The Lancaster County Planning Commission had recommended disapproval of the project, saying it was the wrong use for a farm on prime soils surrounded by preserved farms.

Supervisors, in approving the project, stipulated a $20,000 fund to make sure the property has adequate ground cover to prevent erosion and that noxious weeds or invasive plants don't grow.

The township will get $30,000 annually once the solar farm is in operation.

Also, the solar panels must be removed and the land returned to its natural state by May 2039, unless Community Energy seeks to continue production and the township approves it.

Construction is expected to begin by the end of the year.

Rendell also announced Innovative Energy Projects grants to two other Lancaster County projects.

Quanta Technologies of Malvern will get $500,000 to expand an insulating glass system for mass-market consumption.

The energy-saving glass had been manufactured for low-income weatherization programs. Now, the glass will target general consumers and for retrofitting historic homes and buildings.

Also, Kline's Services, of Salunga, will get $250,000 toward the second phase of construction of a methane digester and generator to produce electricity from waste the business collects.

The biogas from the waste will be used to fuel an engine generator that will produce four times the amount of electricity needed to power the business. Surplus power will be sold to PPL.

acrable@lnpnews.com

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