walnut township solar project approved

Sunlight, acres of it. That’s what Eastern Cottontail Solar LLC is banking on with their massive 1,550-acre solar project in Walnut Township, Fairfield County. The Ohio Power Siting Board just gave them the thumbs up. Not everyone’s thrilled.

The project promises to pump 220 megawatts of solar-generated electricity into the regional grid. Big deal? Yeah, actually. We’re talking about $147.1 million in economic impact during construction alone. Money talks.

Jobs too. The project will support 675 positions—450 direct construction jobs, with the rest being indirect or induced employment. Once built, annual local payments could hit $1.98 million. Schools, libraries, parks, local government—all getting a slice of that solar pie.

Local landowners are cashing in. Leasing farmland for solar panels beats struggling with crops some years. One property owner signed over 78 acres. Retirement fund, sorted.

The company claims they’re balancing energy needs with agriculture. Minimal adverse impact, they say. They did their homework—environmental surveys, community engagement, ecological studies. The whole nine yards.

Public hearings happened. Questions were asked. Concerns were raised. The meeting at Pleasantville Elementary School on January 27, 2025, was packed. Some neighbors worry about their views. Others about their property values. Valid points.

EDF Power Solutions, the parent company, pushed through anyway. They checked all the regulatory boxes. Dotted their i’s, crossed their t’s. The project aligns with their commitment to providing sustainable power solutions for future generations.

When the panels eventually wear out? There’s a plan for that too. Decommissioning procedures will supposedly restore the land. We’ll see about that in a few decades.

For now, it’s happening. Walnut Township is getting a massive solar farm whether locals like it or not. The panels will generate clean energy for at least 25 years with minimal maintenance requirements. Clean energy has its price—1,550 acres of it. The debate continues, but the bulldozers are coming. Progress, they call it. Others might use different words.

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