Your Money or Your Wildlife: Environmental and Economic Tradeoffs from Solar Siting Restrictions in Texas
Abstract
Texas’ utility-scale solar capacity more than doubled in 2016, and more than doubled again in2017-18, and Texas ranks third in the nation for anticipated solar capacity additions. The
anticipated land use conversion of large areas required for solar development could result in
habitat loss and fragmentation, making it imperative to assess the environmental impacts of
such wide-scale expansion of solar energy, as well as to consider the costs of solar siting land
use restrictions on the electricity sector, consumers and air quality.
In this study we combine a highly detailed electricity system-and-market model with an air
pollution model and an extensive array of geospatial data on physical, legal, and habitat quality
to project how much important habitat land will be covered with solar arrays in Texas, as well
as to evaluate the benefits and costs of potential solar siting restrictions aimed at reducing the
habitat impacts from solar. Our study determines the optimal renewable energy portfolio and
siting locations based on resource potential, costs, solar siting exclusions, and accounting for
solar project economies of scale. We estimate the welfare effects of protecting important
habitat land that would otherwise be covered with a solar array. These costs include health
effects from utility emissions changes, consumer and producer surplus changes in the electricity
sector (which itself includes the costs of building and operating the solar facilities and
transmitting their power), and lost government revenue, but exclude the benefit of protecting
the habitat itself. The solar siting restrictions cause these welfare losses by reducing solar
development, making solar and wind development more costly, increasing curtailment of solar
and wind generation, increasing emissions, and increasing the use of inefficient natural gasfired
“peaker” generators to compensate for more variable generation from wind and solar
combined.