A new Ohio bill could be a de facto statewide ban on solar and wind
Few states highlight this fact as well as Ohio does. The Buckeye State makes solar and wind farms go through extra hurdles that dont apply to fossil-fueled or nuclear power plants, including counties ability to ban projects. Its siting authorities have also deferred to local opposition for renewable energy while granting opponents little say over where petroleum drilling rigs and fracking waste can go.
A bill now working its way through the Republican-controlled Ohio legislature threatens to raise even more barriers for wind power and solar farms. On Tuesday, the Ohio Senates Energy Committee held its third hearing on Senate Bill 294. Its unclear whether the committee will hear additional testimony, so under state law the bill could pass out of committee as soon as its next meeting.
The bill would declare it to be state policy in all cases for new electricity-generation facilities to employ affordable, reliable, and clean energy sources. But the bills definitions not only veer from common usage in ways that would exclude renewables but also threaten to block wind and solar development altogether.
If Senate Bill 294 were enacted, the Ohio Power Siting Board would be unable to support renewable energy projects under the bills restrictive definition. This would place Ohio at a disadvantage, said Evangeline Hobbs, a deputy director at the American Clean Power Association, in joint testimony for that group and fellow industry organization MAREC Action. At precisely the moment when Ohio needs every available energy source, this bill would tie the states hands.
https://www.canarymedia.com/articles/clean-energy/new-ohio-bill-could-ban-solar-wind