MANCHESTER — State officials have approved a Lake Street solar facility that has proved controversial among some neighbors. The Connecticut Siting Council approved a petition from North Haven-based solar developer Greenskies Clean Energy to build a 1.2-megawatt solar photovoltaic electric generating facility at 81 and 93 Lake St., two largely vacant agricultural properties totaling close to 30 acres. The project consists of two separate but connected solar arrays, with a 750-kilowatt facility on 93 Lake St. and a 450-kilowatt facility on 81 Lake St. taking up a total footprint of 6.3 acres with a combined 2,136 modules. The original petition filed by Greenskies in August billed the facility as providing “multiple benefits” to the town, state, and region through production of renewable energy, and the Siting Council’s decision echoes that sentiment. The draft decision and order, dated March 27, states that the Siting Council finds there is a “public benefit” for the construction of the facility and that it would not have a “substantial adverse environmental effect,” and that the council will therefore issue a declaratory ruling for the proposed facility. The Siting Council’s draft opinion, dated March 27, states that pursuant to Connecticut General Statutes, the council has “exclusive jurisdiction” over the facility proposed by Greenskies and shall approve by declaratory ruling any such project as long as it “meets the air and water quality standards of the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection and the Council does not find a substantial adverse environmental effect.”
Siting Council approves Manchester solar project on nearly 30 acres
