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RMI Projects Increased Energy Generation, Economic Opportunity Through…

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Unused landfills are a significant opportunity for cities, counties, and states around the country to expand solar development and generate multiple benefits for their communities.

Some cities, counties and states across America have started converting closed landfills into solar sites to generate clean energy and transform their communities. A RMI new report reveals that the potential for this practice is relatively untapped and could help boost the energy transition around the country.

The Future of Landfills Is Bright estimates that the over 10,000 closed landfills in the United States could host at least 63 gigawatts (GW) of solar capacity, or the equivalent of 70% of total installed US solar capacity through 2020. If this potential was fully realized, landfill solar installations could produce 83 terawatt hours (TWh) of clean electricity annually—enough to power 7.8 million homes.

“When I look at a closed landfill, I don’t see an old trash site, I see an opportunity for creative land use,” said Matthew Popkin, manager on RMI’s Urban Transformation team and report co-author. “Using closed landfills to passively generate clean electricity may be their highest and best use. Communities can reinvent these sites with limited reuse potential to advance their clean energy futures—and the benefits don’t stop there.”

In addition to energy generation, RMI’s analysis also examines other benefits landfill solar can provide communities. By repurposing closed landfills for sustainable, non-hazardous uses, state and local governments can advance environmental justice by creating jobs and helping revitalize the lower-income communities where many closed landfills are located.

Currently, landfill solar projects are geographically concentrated in the northeast United States, with almost 75% of operating projects located in Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Jersey and New York. But landfills are everywhere and there is a significant opportunity for cities, counties, and states around the country to expand adoption of this practice and generate multiple benefits for their communities.

For example, the historically neglected, majority-Black Houston neighborhood of Sunnyside will soon be home to the largest landfill solar installation in the nation. A project announced in early 2021 is converting a 240-acre site that has negatively impacted the community for over 80 years into a 52-megawatt solar farm. Once operational, in late 2022 or early 2023, the site will generate enough clean electricity to power 5,000 homes and offset 120 million pounds of CO2 each year.

The Future of Landfills Is Bright outlines how states and local governments can jumpstart landfill solar development by building on previous policies, incentives and best practices from governments that have led the way on landfill solar development.

To download the report, visit: https://rmi.org/insight/the-future-of-landfills-is-bright.

Media Inquiries please contact:

Nick Steel, Director of Public Relations

T +1-347-574-0887, E: nsteel@rmi.org

About RMI

RMI is an independent nonprofit founded in 1982 that transforms global energy systems through market-driven solutions to align with a 1.5°C future and secure a clean, prosperous, zero-carbon future for all. We work in the world’s most critical geographies and engage businesses, policymakers, communities, and NGOs to identify and scale energy system interventions that will cut greenhouse gas emissions at least 50 percent by 2030. RMI has offices in Basalt and Boulder, Colorado; New York City; Oakland, California; Washington, D.C.; and Beijing.

More information on RMI can be found at rmi.org or follow us on Twitter @RockyMtnInst.

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Source: https://www.prweb.com/releases/rmi_projects_increased_energy_generation_economic_opportunity_through_landfill_solar_development/prweb18323855.htm

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