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On solar energy, a top-down push meets bottom-up doubts

In Louisiana’s St. James Parish, where sugar cane has long been ceding ground to the energy industry, council members say they aren’t opposed to solar power. 

But in a pattern mirrored across the country, leaders here say they want to carefully consider issues ranging from the aesthetics to the local economic benefits of specific proposals.

Why We Wrote This

Solar power is a growth industry and a national priority. But that doesn’t mean solar projects are easily built. One problem may be a lack of dialogue and cooperation between investors and local communities.

The local planning commission rejected one solar project proposed last year by the renewable energy investment arm of a New York-based hedge fund. The Parish Council then voted to impose a temporary moratorium on large solar installations while the issues are evaluated.

“It has to be in the right location,” council member Jason Amato says.

The turmoil over local approval threatens to slow nationwide efforts to combat climate change by expanding solar and wind energy. What’s happening here near New Orleans is a reminder that these efforts depend on more than just federal policies and willing business investors.

Research by Lawrence Susskind, an environmental planning expert at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, finds that community resistance often stems in part from a lack of private-investor dialogue with communities.

“Louisiana is part of a national story,” he says.

Sugar cane has always grown at the intersection of Highways 3127 and 20 in St. James Parish. Even as subdivisions gradually eat away row after neat row of pasture, the crop has survived on rural Vacherie’s landscape as an unofficial timekeeper, marking the seasons across the unincorporated community’s more than 300-year modern history.

But alongside new stalks in this area, just west of New Orleans, is a mounting conflict over a newer and fast-growing part of America’s rural economy: renewable energy development.

Last year, the New York-based hedge fund D.E. Shaw Group’s renewable energy investments arm introduced a proposal to construct a large-scale solar installation on the sugar cane acreage near the intersection. The St. James Parish planning commission’s rejection of the proposal in May last year was followed in August by a 6-1 vote among Parish Council members for a temporary moratorium on solar projects.

Why We Wrote This

Solar power is a growth industry and a national priority. But that doesn’t mean solar projects are easily built. One problem may be a lack of dialogue and cooperation between investors and local communities.

Council members say they aren’t opposed to solar power – or to plans by local electric utility Entergy to expand it in Louisiana.

“I’m OK with that,” council member Jason Amato says.

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