Center for American Progress

Fact Sheet: How States Can Turn Polluted Lands Into Clean Energy
Fact Sheet

Fact Sheet: How States Can Turn Polluted Lands Into Clean Energy

In the absence of federal leadership, states should encourage renewable energy development on contaminated lands—including landfills, abandoned mines, and brownfield sites—in order to reap economic benefits and meet rising electricity demand.

Turbines from the Roth Rock wind farm along the Backbone Mountain are seen on August 23, 2022.
Turbines from the Roth Rock wind farm along the Backbone Mountain are seen on August 23, 2022, in Oakland, Maryland. (Getty/Chip Somodevilla)

U.S. electricity demand is projected to increase 25 percent by 2030 due to electrification and data center growth. Although clean energy is the cheapest and fastest option to meet this demand, renewable projects face significant barriers, particularly around land use and siting. Large-footprint projects such as wind and solar often encounter community opposition and conflicts with agriculture or habitat preservation, leading to delays, litigation, and increased costs.

Meanwhile, according to a Center for American Progress analysis of Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) RE-Powering America’s Land Initiative data, there are more than 81,000 contaminated sites across the United States—including landfills, abandoned mines, and brownfields—suitable for wind and solar generation. CAP analysis finds that these sites could host more than 940 gigawatts of clean energy capacity, enough to power roughly 158 million homes when running at peak hours of the day. Projects would enable site cleanups that transform potential health hazards into assets—not only meeting electricity demand but also creating jobs, generating tax revenue, and boosting property values, all while reducing pressure on valuable lands for agriculture and wildlife.

81,097

Number of contaminated sites suitable for wind and solar generation across the United States

Yet the development of contaminated sites faces challenges: higher remediation costs, informational barriers, complicated liabilities, and uncertain permitting and development timelines. With federal support under attack and the premature phase-out of Inflation Reduction Act clean energy tax credits, state action is more critical than ever.

For more information and detailed policy recommendations, read the report

Encouragingly, states such as Massachusetts, New Jersey, and New York have successfully spurred development on contaminated lands by combining financial and nonfinancial incentives, demonstrating that smart policy can overcome barriers. Pennsylvania, California, West Virginia, Virginia, and New York have the highest potential for power generation, but all states have suitable contaminated sites for clean energy and would benefit from supportive policies.

Policy recommendations for states

  • Identify and communicate opportunity. Maintain public informational resources on potential sites, signal policy support with procurement preferences, provide technical assistance for communities, and conduct feasibility studies.
  • Enable predictable development timelines. Streamline permitting for projects on contaminated lands that can demonstrate limited conflicts or risks, improve interagency coordination, and address liability for developers.
  • Offset development costs. Supplement federal cleanup funds, offer financial incentives, and assist in preparing sites for development.

Without federal leadership, states must act to unlock clean energy on contaminated lands—turning liabilities into community assets while meeting electricity demand.

The positions of American Progress, and our policy experts, are independent, and the findings and conclusions presented are those of American Progress alone. American Progress would like to acknowledge the many generous supporters who make our work possible.

Authors

Alia Hidayat

Senior Policy Analyst, Conservation Policy

Team

Conservation Policy

We work to protect our lands, waters, ocean, and wildlife to address the linked climate and biodiversity crises. This work helps to ensure that all people can access and benefit from nature and that conservation and climate investments build a resilient, just, and inclusive economy.

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