Center for American Progress

How States Can Turn Polluted Lands Into Clean Energy
Report

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.

In this article
Turbines from the Roth Rock wind farm are seen in Oakland, Maryland, August 23, 2022.
Turbines from the Roth Rock wind farm are seen in Oakland, Maryland, August 23, 2022. (Getty/Chip Somodevilla)

Introduction and summary

Electricity demand is booming in the United States. As the country electrifies its economy and builds out more data centers, electricity demand is projected to increase 25 percent by 2030.1 In order to combat already rising electricity costs2 across the nation, the United States must rapidly deploy all the lowest-cost energy it can at a massive scale. Sources of clean energy,3 particularly solar, are not only cheaper on average4 than fossil fuels but also faster to bring online.5 Nonetheless, new clean energy projects face challenges and delayed construction timelines.6 In particular, land use and siting can be a significant barrier. Renewables such as wind and solar have a large footprint, making them susceptible to community opposition and increasing risk of conflicts7 with other uses such as agriculture or wildlife habitat. These conflicts and opposition can lead to increased delays, litigation, and costs.

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One potential solution is to repurpose abandoned, contaminated land such as closed landfills, abandoned mines, and brownfield sites, a broad term for lands whose redevelopment is complicated by contamination. These lands present a major opportunity8 to build clean energy with limited conflicts, while delivering benefits—including jobs, revenues, and contaminated site cleanup—to communities living nearby. A new Center for American Progress analysis of Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) RE-Powering America’s Land Initiative9 data finds that more than 81,097 previously contaminated sites across the United States could host utility- and distributed-scale (or “grid-scale”) wind and solar energy, totaling more than 940,000 megawatts (MW) in clean energy capacity. While not all sites will be suitable for clean energy,10 developing just 12 percent of this prescreened potential capacity by 2030 could offset growth in peak electricity demand.11 The opportunity for build-out on contaminated lands will likely continue to grow as more than 850 coal and natural gas power plants12 are set to close by 2030, though this may change in the face of rising electricity demand and changing federal policy.

Despite the promise of these sites, additional costs, informational barriers, and regulatory hurdles often deter developers and communities from pursuing projects on contaminated lands. These challenges are compounded by current federal attacks on funding and permits13 for renewable energy. Fortunately, several states have shown that strong policy can address many of these hurdles and unlock clean energy development on low-conflict, contaminated lands where other options for reuse are limited. This report highlights their successes and offers recommendations for others seeking to spur similar projects. Recommendations are provided for contaminated lands at large and for three specific site types: landfills, brownfields, and abandoned mines.

Clean energy on previously developed lands benefits communities, nature, and developers

There are well-documented benefits14 to clean energy development on contaminated lands, sometimes referred to as “repurposed”15 energy or “brightfield”16 development. Sites typically require cleanup before use,17 transforming potential hazards into productive and safer community assets. Projects can help boost local employment and spending,18 push back against rising electricity prices,19 and generate revenue through leases and sales,20 tax revenue, or other payments.21 Communities can also gain raised property values22 and potentially negotiate for additional benefits.23

Contaminated lands can also be attractive from a developer’s point of view. For one thing, these sites are generally cheaper24 to purchase or lease than productive greenfield sites, also referred to as undeveloped sites, though remediation costs may increase prices. Many contaminated lands are also in places with existing roads, electricity infrastructure, and fencing,25 which could lower construction costs. Long wait times for grid interconnection approval26 can slow projects down significantly; in 2023, the median wait time was five years.27 Locating clean projects on contaminated sites such as retired coal or gas-fired power plants can provide access to preexisting interconnection rights.28 Crucially, studies have shown strong community support29 for clean energy projects on already-disturbed sites, helping mitigate community opposition.

Lastly, these projects deliver strong environmental benefits. In addition to the climate benefits that clean energy broadly brings, developing this infrastructure on contaminated lands eases pressure30 to build on more sensitive, pristine lands that serve as important habitats, provide ecosystem services, or are valuable for agriculture.

Leaving contaminated lands idle is not only a potential health hazard but also a missed economic development opportunity that forfeits environmental benefits for communities.

Barriers to developing clean energy on contaminated lands

Despite the benefits, developers and landowners face barriers to developing clean energy on contaminated lands. First are informational barriers: Since there is no comprehensive national inventory31 of abandoned mines and data can vary by state, it can be challenging for developers and communities to identify suitable sites or determine who owns them.32 Second, developers often have to pay extra for site cleanup and additional engineering challenges.33 For example, to avoid penetrating a landfill cap, solar panels need to be ballasted34 on top of the surface, creating additional costs. Damaged caps or preexisting structures can also complicate construction. Another issue is size. Larger installations can achieve economies of scale,35 spreading out fixed costs such as manufacturing facilities and specialized installation equipment and resulting in lower per-unit costs. However, since many contaminated sites are small, it can be difficult for developers to achieve economical large-scale development. Contaminated sites also can come with complicated liabilities,36 such as responsibility for cleaning up contamination at a site, from which developers often shy away. Lastly, projects on contaminated lands require additional state and federal environmental site assessments37 and may have uncertain permitting timelines, adding to the potential costs and delays. Together, these factors mean that brownfield developments typically cost 10 percent to 15 percent more38 than greenfield development.

In absence of guiding policies, developers will often target the path of least resistance:39 developing on greenfields. Leaving contaminated lands idle is not only a potential health hazard but also a missed economic development opportunity that forfeits benefits for communities. Smart policy can help make these projects more attainable. The Inflation Reduction Act helped close the cost gap,40 offering a 10 percent additional tax credit for clean developments on certain contaminated lands. However, now that the Big Beautiful Bill is prematurely phasing out41 the underlying clean energy tax credits for wind and solar, state policy will be more important than ever if the United States is going to meet electricity demand and keep electricity affordable.42

Opportunities to expand clean development on contaminated sites

While developers in almost every state have constructed clean energy on contaminated lands, Massachusetts, New Jersey, and New York have built on the most sites. These states offer a combination43 of financial and nonfinancial incentives to developers, balancing redevelopment opportunities with state and local land use priorities.44 Through 2024, only 581 solar, wind, or battery storage projects have been developed on contaminated lands, totaling approximately 4,300 MW in maximum capacity.

This is a small fraction of the more than 81,000 remaining prescreened sites, which could generate more than 940,000 MW—enough energy to power roughly 158 million homes during peak hours of the day45—in viable utility- and distributed-scale wind and solar capacity, referred to as “screened potential capacity” from here forward in this report. Every state hosts contaminated sites with generation potential and should work to take advantage of these opportunities. The states with the largest amount of potentially developable capacity are Pennsylvania, California, West Virginia, Virginia, and New York. Each state has its own unique mix of site types, though overall, abandoned mines and brownfields have the largest potential for new clean energy capacity.

Policy recommendations for developing clean energy on contaminated lands

Based on CAP’s analysis of RE-Powering America’s Land data and review of the literature and state policies, this section provides examples of policies that states can pursue to accelerate clean energy development on contaminated lands. The first two examples significantly reduce development costs at little to no cost to states, while the third requires more investment from states to offset development costs. Finally, this section provides examples of how states can tailor these policies to facilitate development on certain types of contaminated lands.

1. Identify and communicate opportunity

States can help solve information barriers by evaluating the development opportunities within their borders, providing resources for communities and developers, and communicating support for redevelopment. For example, states can:

  • Maintain public resources for developers and landowners. More data—including on-site ownership, reclamation status, and hosting capacity46—allows for more robust prescreening. For example, New Jersey hosts a dedicated landfill solar website47 as a “one-stop shop” for municipalities and developers, plus a community solar siting tool.48
  • Signal support for contaminated land redevelopment. Developers tend to look for reliable government and community partners. A renewable portfolio standard carveout or procurement preference49 for projects developed on contaminated sites demonstrates policy support while stimulating demand for these projects.
  • Provide technical assistance to communities. Local governments that host contaminated lands may not be aware of the opportunity50 or have the expertise51 necessary to site these developments. Additional technical assistance as well as model local laws and guides52 could support them. States should prioritize projects that demonstrate community and local government support.53
  • Conduct feasibility studies. Pennsylvania,54 Michigan,55 Minnesota,56 and Virginia57 recently published state-specific assessments, identifying opportunities for development on landfills, brownfields, or abandoned mines in their states and issuing policy recommendations.

2. Enable shorter, more predictable development timelines

States should evaluate whether environmental review, permitting, and interconnection processes can be adjusted to ease development while balancing the public interest. This would provide developers and investors with greater certainty that their projects will be able to recover costs within a reasonable timeframe. For example, states can: 

  • Allow easier pathways for complying with permitting and environmental review requirements. States can help by streamlining permitting for desired clean energy projects that have already demonstrated that they have limited conflicts. For example,58 New York exempts certain brownfield and landfill projects from state environmental review and offers an alternate, expedited permitting process through its Office of Renewable Energy Siting59 for projects of more than 25 MW. Explicitly limiting liability60 for clean energy on state-administered contaminated lands could further ease61 developers’ concerns.
  • Improve interagency coordination. Projects on contaminated lands often have complex processes crossing multiple jurisdictions. To the extent possible, states should coordinate agencies’ review of applications and administration62 of incentive programs. This will help developers better navigate complex processes and reduce agency bottlenecks. For example,63 New Jersey’s Department of Environmental Protection coordinates all permitting and incentive processes in conjunction with the Board of Public Utilities and Economic Development Authority.

3. Offset costs where possible

States can also offer financial incentives to get more sites ready for development and more projects over the finish line faster. For example, states can:

  • Supplement federal cleanup programs. Federally funded cleanup efforts64 are generally delegated to the states, which can unlock more clean energy investment by targeting cleanup on sites with the most development potential. States can supplement funds such as the Abandoned Mine Lands (AML),65 AML Economic Revitalization,66 EPA Brownfield,67 and Superfund68 programs via state brownfield, Superfund, or voluntary cleanup programs.69
  • Offset development costs with financial incentives. States can also reimburse developers for preparing sites through brownfield redevelopment grant programs. For example, Rhode Island’s Renewable Energy Fund70 offers grants to offset the costs of developing solar energy on certain contaminated sites. Incentives71 can also help offset costs; for example, brownfields and abandoned mine developments are among the only site types eligible for New Jersey’s72 Community Solar Energy program.
  • Prepare sites for development. States can also directly undertake all preconstruction steps necessary, especially for sites that are particularly promising but difficult to prepare. New York’s Build Ready program73 conducts all screening, site preparation, permitting, and interconnection processes on chosen contaminated sites, auctioning them off to developers in a “build-ready” state.

Understanding the challenges and opportunities of different land use types

States should be aware of the unique challenges of developing on different types of contaminated land and craft their policies accordingly.74 This section provides nonexhaustive examples of how states can tailor the above recommendations to different land types. The following land types are not mutually exclusive but broadly align with the EPA’s RE-Powering classifications.75

Landfills
South Portland built a solar array on top of a capped landfill.

South Portland built a solar array on top of a capped landfill. (Getty/Gregory Rec/Portland Press Herald)

To date, landfills dominate contaminated clean energy site developments. Despite being a small portion of potential developable capacity on contaminated sites—just 6 percent, according to CAP analysis—they make up 21 percent of already-developed capacity and almost half of all developed sites. This is partly because landfills are arguably the most straightforward contaminated sites to develop at scale, despite having unique engineering challenges.76 They are ubiquitous, monitored, managed, and capped77—meaning they are covered78 to isolate and avoid the spread of contamination—at the end of their lifespans and generally have straightforward ownership by local governments. When capped, they provide adequate open space and few other redevelopment opportunities.79 Virtually every state has a significant amount of screened, undeveloped landfill capacity and would benefit80 from some sort of landfill development policy.

In Wisconsin and Connecticut, landfills make up the greatest share of potential capacity—at 58 percent and 55 percent, respectively, and Massachusetts has developed more solar capacity on landfills than any other state. This is thanks in part to the state’s concerted effort81 to shift clean energy development away from limited high-value land.

Abandoned mines
Rock wind farm is seen on Backbone Mountain behind the Mettiki Coal processing plant in Oakland, Maryland.

A turbine from the Roth Rock wind farm is seen on Backbone Mountain behind the Mettiki Coal processing plant in Oakland, Maryland, August 23, 2022. (Getty/Chip Somodevilla)

Despite making up one-third of screened potential wind and solar capacity nationwide, abandoned mines provided only 12 percent of capacity on repurposed lands as of 2024. There are several reasons why the United States may struggle to redevelop abandoned mines at scale, including high costs of reclamation. Under the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act,82 mines abandoned since 1977 must be reclaimed—restored to as close to pre-mine condition as possible—by the owner. However, there are many legacy mines that were abandoned before 1977 for which previous owners are not liable. While these mines are eligible for funding through the Abandoned Mine Land program, if the federal government has not provided adequate funds, projects may prove too costly for a clean energy developer to take on. Even determining who has rights to mine lands83 tends to be more complicated than with other site types due to the likelihood of multiple owners. But if these obstacles are overcome, reclaimed mines can be promising due to their large size compared with other contaminated lands.

Three of the six abandoned mine projects that have come online since 2016 were in New York. The states with the greatest relative shares of screened potential capacity on abandoned mines—Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Virginia—share a history of coal mining.84 Of these states, Pennsylvania and West Virginia are together receiving85 up to $219 million86 in federal funding to pilot solar on mines under the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act’s Clean Energy Demonstration Program on Current and Former Mine Land.

State and federal brownfields
The Bighorn Solar project is seen in Pueblo, Colorado

The Bighorn Solar project is seen in Pueblo, Colorado, March 18, 2022. (GettyJim West/UCG/Universal Images Group)

In this report, “brownfields” is an umbrella term87 for sites complicated by potential contamination or hazardous materials, as designated by the EPA or state environmental agencies. This can include mismanaged landfills and abandoned mines but also contaminated farmlands, warehouses, retired factories, and coal power plants. Brownfields make up 28 percent of potential screened capacity in the United States and 18 percent of capacity developed to date. On average, brownfield sites occupy a smaller footprint than contaminated lands overall and may still contain structures that require demolition or otherwise complicate development. Their redevelopment may also be subject to strict environmental regulation.88 However, the designation of a site as a brownfield opens doors to subsidized remediation.89 These sites may be advantageous as they are often near population centers90 and other places with high electricity demand.

New Jersey stands out for its robust policy framework, which has helped deliver 36 projects on brownfields in the state. Oregon and Maine both owe more than 80 percent of their known potential capacity on contaminated lands to brownfields. This may be due to programs that flag and monitor these types of sites in these states.91

Site types with additional challenges: Superfund and Resource Conservation and Recovery Act sites

CAP’s analysis also found that there is significant additional opportunity on Superfund and Resource Conversation Recovery Act (RCRA) sites. Both are heavily contaminated, hazardous sites that pose significant challenges for redevelopment.92 Superfund sites are governed by the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act and are uncontrolled or abandoned, whereas RCRA sites are largely still in active use and have defined ownership. Superfund sites constitute about 21 percent of projects developed to date—45 percent of developed capacity—and about 15 percent of the United States’ estimated potential capacity. In particular, Montana, South Dakota, Idaho, and Washington have significant amounts of potential capacity on Superfund sites. According to CAP analysis, RCRA sites represent about 22 percent of screened potential capacity nationwide but just a small fraction (3 percent) of capacity developed to date—likely because they are still in active use.

The heavy contamination in these sites makes them particularly difficult and expensive to redevelop. However, there are some examples of successful redevelopment including a major solar installation at the Edwards Air Force Base93 in California and a wind power project at Bethlehem Steel Wind94 in New York. More research is needed to better understand how states can support these types of developments. States may benefit from prioritizing sites with significant clean energy development potential for Superfund cleanup funding.

Emerging trends and opportunities for synergy with repurposed lands

States can proactively colocate clean energy on repurposed contaminated lands along with data centers, which face many of the same siting criteria and challenges.95 Colocating renewables and data centers on contaminated lands such as mines96 could supply clean electricity to offset the increasing demand97 of data centers while providing communities with economic diversification.98 Even smaller, urban sites or sites that are otherwise unsuitable for generating electricity can be redeveloped into battery99 or electric vehicle charging infrastructure.100

Conclusion

Clean energy on contaminated lands presents a significant opportunity to revitalize communities while relieving the development pressure on more pristine lands. While such projects present additional challenges compared with greenfield development, leading states such as New Jersey, New York, and Massachusetts have demonstrated how strong policies can help enable building on these areas. State decision-makers should capitalize on this economic development opportunity with supportive policies that identify and communicate opportunity, enable predictable development timelines, and help lower costs. The effectiveness of these policies demonstrates repurposed lands’ promise to be productive and critical assets in the country’s future electric grid.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank Jenny Rowland-Shea, Kendra Hughes, Lucero Marquez, Nicole Gentile, Anh Nguyen, Bill Rapp, Hannah Wiseman, Kate Petosa, Margaret Cooney, Bianca Serbin, Chester Hawkins, and Meghan Miller for their contributions.

Methodology

Estimates of developed and screened potential capacity by state are derived from the EPA’s RE-Powering America’s Land initiative.101 The EPA offers acreage and prescreened potential capacity site data for undeveloped/underdeveloped sites, from which CAP derived screened potential capacity estimates. Sites that theoretically are developable but lack sufficient data for the EPA to estimate developable capacity were excluded. Unless otherwise specified, developable capacity estimates assume the highest-capacity choice between wind and solar for each site.

To analyze already-developed projects, CAP used the EPA’s Re-Powering Tracking Matrix.102 The authors included projects on landfill buffers in the “landfill” category and included “state brownfields” in the “brownfields” category.

CAP eliminated from screened potential capacity and site count totals any sites in the RE-Powering dataset that had been screened and were later reasonably fully developed or nearly fully developed. To determine which sites were developed, CAP projected 500-foot radii from all developed sites in EPA’s Re-Powering Tracking Matrix103 and visually confirmed the presence of any solar or wind projects using Google Maps in EPA screened sites. Sites that appeared to be minimally developed were counted toward screened potential capacity and site count totals, as were sites that are developed for other RE-Power renewable energy categories, such as geothermal or biomass energy, as these can host additional wind, solar, and/or storage capacity.

CAP adhered to the EPA’s classification of projects as either “utility-scale” or “distributed-/community-scale,” except for one solar project that was deemed too far from the nearest transmission line to count as utility-scale and 478 distributed solar projects that are missing capacity estimates. An additional 167 projects that RE-Power had screened were deemed reasonably fully developed. Please refer to the EPA RE-Powering program for methodology.104

Other factors can affect site technical feasibility, including but not limited to slope, the presence of sensitive habitat and impeding structures, and local grid constraints. Sites are nonexhaustive and represent only those that EPA screened in 2021; CAP’s analysis should be considered demonstrative. The total amount of developable capacity on sites across all land types exceeds the stated overall total because sites can fall into multiple categories.

Endnotes

  1. ICF, “Fast forward: Electricity demand expected to grow 25% by 2030,” June 9, 2025, available at https://www.icf.com/insights/energy/electricity-demand-expected-to-grow.
  2. Akshay Thyagarajan and Shannon Baker-Branstetter, “With Americans Facing Utility Bill Increases This Year, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act Threatens To Drive Costs Even Higher,” Center for American Progress, June 13, 2025, available at https://www.americanprogress.org/article/with-americans-facing-utility-bill-increases-this-year-the-one-big-beautiful-bill-act-threatens-to-drive-costs-even-higher/; Akshay Thyagarajan, Jamie Friedman, and Shannon Baker-Branstetter, “Residents in at Least 41 States and Washington, D.C., Are Facing Increased Electric and Natural Gas Bills,” Center for American Progress, September 9, 2025, available at https://www.americanprogress.org/article/residents-in-at-least-41-states-and-washington-d-c-are-facing-increased-electric-and-natural-gas-bills/.
  3. Benjamin Storrow, “Wind and Solar Energy Are Cheaper Than Electricity from Fossil-Fuel Plants,” Scientific American, June 17, 2025, available at https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/wind-and-solar-energy-are-cheaper-than-electricity-from-fossil-fuel-plants/.
  4. Lazard, “Levelized Cost of Energy+” (New York: 2024), available at https://www.lazard.com/media/xemfey0k/lazards-lcoeplus-june-2024-_vf.pdf.
  5. Jared Burden, “Energy meets urgency: Solving the data center power problem with solar,” Utility Dive, September 4, 2025, available at https://www.utilitydive.com/news/data-center-power-problem-solar/758809/; NextEra Energy, “March Investor Presentation,” March 2025, available at https://www.investor.nexteraenergy.com/~/media/Files/N/NEE-IR/news-and-events/events-and-presentations/2025/2025%20March%20Investor%20Deck.pdf.
  6. Robi Nilson, Ben Hoen, and Joe Rand, “Survey of Utility-Scale Wind and Solar Developers” (Berkeley, CA: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, 2024), available at https://emp.lbl.gov/publications/survey-utility-scale-wind-and-solar.
  7. Ibid.
  8. Matthew Popkin, “The Time is Ripe for Communities to Embrace Clean Energy on Brownfields,” Rocky Mountain Institute, September 26, 2022, available at https://rmi.org/time-for-communities-to-embrace-clean-energy-on-brownfields/.
  9. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, “RE-Powering America’s Land,” available at https://www.epa.gov/re-powering (last accessed October 2025).
  10. Energy Ready, “Solar at Scale: Siting Solar on Brownfields and Underutilized Lands,” March 19, 2025, available at https://energy-ready.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/Solar-on-Brownfields-and-Underutilized-Lands-3.19.25.pdf.
  11. Calculated assuming a 14 percent increase from a750,000 MW peak. See Lalit Batra and others, “Rising current: America’s growing electricity demand” (Reston, VA: ICF, 2025), available at https://www.icf.com/-/media/files/icf/reports/2025/energy-demand-report-icf-2025_report.pdf?rev=c87f111ab97f481a8fe3d3148a372f7f; U.S. Energy Information Administration, “U.S. electricity peak demand set new records twice in July,” August 5, 2025, available at https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.php?id=65864.
  12. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, “Power Plant Retirements,” available at https://epa.maps.arcgis.com/apps/dashboards/591b44aa8dd144719e059a39cb625c99 (last accessed October 2025).
  13. Mariel Lutz, Alia Hidayat, and Kate Petosa, “The Trump Administration and Congress’ Attacks on Wind Power Are Killing Thousands of Jobs and Risk Thousands More” (Washington: Center for American Progress, 2025), available at https://www.americanprogress.org/article/the-trump-administration-and-congress-attacks-on-wind-power-are-killing-thousands-of-jobs-and-risk-thousands-more/.
  14. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, “Benefits Matrix,” available at https://www.epa.gov/re-powering/benefits-matrix (last accessed October 2025).
  15. Alexandra Klass, “The Untapped Potential of ‘Repurposed Energy,’” Kleinman Center for Energy Policy, August 12, 2024, available at https://kleinmanenergy.upenn.edu/research/publications/the-untapped-potential-of-repurposed-energy/.
  16. Rocky Mountain Institute, “Brightfields Accelerator,” available at https://rmi.org/us-program/brightfields-accelerator/ (last accessed October 2025).
  17. Alexandra B. Klass and Hannah Wiseman, “Repurposed Energy,” Minnesota Law Review 109 (1) (2024): 219–339, available at https://repository.law.umich.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4048&context=articles.
  18. Matthew Popkin and Akshay Krishnan, “The Future of Landfills is Bright” (Basalt, CO: Rocky Mountain Institute, 2021), available at https://rmi.org/insight/the-future-of-landfills-is-bright/.
  19. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, “Community Solar: An Opportunity to Enhance Sustainable Development on Landfills and Other Contaminated Sites” (Washington: 2016), available at https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2016-12/documents/epa_repowering_community_solar_discussion_paper_final_120716_508.pdf.
  20. Popkin and Krishnan, “The Future of Landfills is Bright.”
  21. The Nature Conservancy, “Mining the Sun: Transforming mine lands and brownfields into clean energy hubs” (Arlington, VA: 2024), available at https://www.nature.org/content/dam/tnc/nature/en/documents/Mining_the_Sun_Report_Final_5.23.24.pdf.
  22. American Clean Power Association, “Redeveloping Brownfields with Solar: Challenges and Opportunities,” 2022, available at https://cleanpower.org/wp-content/uploads/gateway/2022/08/ACP_FactSheet_Brownfields_220830.pdf.
  23. The Nature Conservancy, “Mining the Sun: Transforming mine lands and brownfields into clean energy hubs”; Clean Air Task Force, “Community Benefits Programs & Clean Energy” (2023), available at https://www.catf.us/resource/community-benefits-programs-clean-energy/.
  24. Popkin and Krishnan, “The Future of Landfills is Bright.”
  25. Benjamin J. Jones and Katherine A. Heriot Hoffer, “Brownfields to Brightfields: State Policy Models to Facilitate the Reuse of Degraded Lands for Renewable Energy” (Fort Collins, CO: Center for the New Energy Economy, 2024), available at https://cnee.colostate.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Brownfields-to-Brightfields_FINAL.pdf.
  26. National Renewable Energy Laboratory, “Renewable Energy System Interconnection Standards,” available at https://www.nrel.gov/state-local-tribal/basics-interconnection-standards (last accessed October 2025).
  27. Energy Markets & Planning, Berkeley Lab, “Queued Up: Characteristics of Power Plants Seeking Transmission Interconnection” (Berkeley, CA: 2024), available at https://emp.lbl.gov/queues.
  28. Klass and Wiseman, “Repurposed Energy.”
  29. Joseph Rand and others, “Perceptions of Large-Scale Solar Project Neighbors: Results From a National Survey” (Berkeley, CA: Energy Markets & Planning, Berkeley Lab, 2024), available at https://emp.lbl.gov/publications/perceptions-large-scale-solar-project.
  30. Klass and Wiseman, “Repurposed Energy.”
  31. Jeffrey L. Mauk and others, “The Abandoned Mine Inventory of the United States—A Brief Summary” (Washington: U.S. Geological Survey Mineral Resources Program, 2025), available at https://pubs.usgs.gov/fs/2025/3003/fs20253003.pdf.
  32. LaBella Associates, “Assessment of Solar Development on Previously Impacted Mine Lands in Pennsylvania” (Harrisburg, PA: Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, 2024), available at https://greenport.pa.gov/elibrary/GetDocument?docId=8421405&DocName=ASSESSMENT%20OF%20SOLAR%20DEVELOPMENT%20ON%20PREVIOUSLY%20IMPACTED%20MINE%20LANDS%20IN%20PENNSYLVANIA.PDF.
  33. Klass and Wiseman, “Repurposed Energy.”
  34. Alex Bazeley, “The Dirt on Landfill Solar (and How to Do It Right),” Waste Advantage Magazine, September 6, 2025, available at http://wasteadvantagemag.com/the-dirt-on-landfill-solar-and-how-to-do-it-right/.
  35. Klass and Wiseman, “Repurposed Energy.”
  36. Ibid.; The Nature Conservancy, “Mining the Sun: Transforming mine lands and brownfields into clean energy hubs.”
  37. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, “Assessing Brownfield Sites Fact Sheet,” June 2020, available at https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2020-07/documents/assessing_brownfield_sites.pdf.
  38. The Nature Conservancy, “Mining the Sun: Transforming mine lands and brownfields into clean energy hubs.”
  39. Jones and Heriot Hoffer, “Brownfields to Brightfields: State Policy Models to Facilitate the Reuse of Degraded Lands for Renewable Energy.”
  40. The Nature Conservancy, “Mining the Sun: Transforming mine lands and brownfields into clean energy hubs.”
  41. Alia Hidayat and Dylan Nezaj, “The One Big, Beautiful Bill Act Endangers the Transformation of Contaminated Sites for Clean Energy Production,” Center for American Progress, July 7, 2025, available at https://www.americanprogress.org/article/the-one-big-beautiful-bill-act-endangers-the-transformation-of-contaminated-sites-for-clean-energy-production/.
  42. Arwen Kozak, “Finding Common Ground in Contaminated Places,” Kleinman Center for Energy Policy, June 30, 2025, available at https://kleinmanenergy.upenn.edu/commentary/blog/finding-common-ground-in-contaminated-places/.
  43. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency RE-Powering America’s Land Initiative, “Profiles of State Programs for Renewables on Landfills, Mines, and Contaminated Sites” (Washington: 2023), available at https://www.epa.gov/system/files/documents/2023-10/42981_epa_re-powering_profiles_of_state_programs_9-18-23_v02_release_508-02.pdf.
  44. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency RE-Powering America’s Lands Initiative, “State Program Selection and Design Tips” (Washington: 2022), available at https://www.epa.gov/system/files/documents/2022-06/epa-re-powering_state_program_design_selection_design_tips_january_26_2022%20508.pdf.
  45. Solar Energy Industries Association, “What’s in a Megawatt?”, available at https://seia.org/whats-in-a-megawatt/ (last accessed October 2025).
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  51. Alex Breckel and Nelson Falkenburg, “Insight Report: State Policy Approaches to Renewable Energy Siting” (Washington: Clean Tomorrow, 2025), available at https://cleantomorrow.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/cleantomorrow_siting-solutions-project_insight-report.pdf.
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  56. Faith Krogstad, “Feasibility of Solar Development on State-Managed Closed Landfills: A Report to the Legislature” (Saint Paul, MN: Minnesota Environmental Quality Board, 2020), available at https://www.leg.mn.gov/docs/2020/mandated/201102.pdf.
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  58. Klass, “The Untapped Potential of ‘Repurposed Energy.’”
  59. NYSERDA, “Office of Renewable Energy Siting,” available at https://www.nyserda.ny.gov/All-Programs/Clean-Energy-Siting-Resources/Siting-for-Large-Scale-Renewables/Office-of-Renewable-Energy-Siting (last accessed October 2025).
  60. Jones and Heriot Hoffer, “Brownfields to Brightfields: State Policy Models to Facilitate the Reuse of Degraded Lands for Renewable Energy.”
  61. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, “Summary of “RE-Powering” State Programs for the Reuse of Virginia Landfills & Brownfields for Solar.”
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  63. The Nature Conservancy, “Mining the Sun: Transforming mine lands and brownfields into clean energy hubs.”
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  66. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, “Brownfield Overview and Definition,” available at https://19january2017snapshot.epa.gov/brownfields/brownfield-overview-and-definition (last accessed October 2025).
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  68. Klass and Wiseman, “Repurposed Energy.”
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  73. Jones and Heriot Hoffer, “Brownfields to Brightfields: State Policy Models to Facilitate the Reuse of Degraded Lands for Renewable Energy.”
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  75. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, “Best Practices for Siting Solar Photovoltaics on Municipal Solid Waste Landfills,” available at https://www.epa.gov/re-powering/best-practices-siting-solar-photovoltaics-municipal-solid-waste-landfills (last accessed October 2025).
  76. Popkin and Krishnan, “The Future of Landfills is Bright.”
  77. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, “Community Guide to Capping,” 2021, available at https://semspub.epa.gov/work/HQ/401585.pdf.
  78. Popkin and Krishnan, “The Future of Landfills is Bright.”
  79. Ibid.
  80. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency RE-Powering America’s Land Initiative, “Profiles of State Programs for Renewables on Landfills, Mines, and Contaminated Sites.”
  81. Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977, Public Law 87, 95th Cong., 1st sess. (November 15, 1977), available at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/COMPS-1574/pdf/COMPS-1574.pdf; Daniel Bresette and Hannah Wilson-Black, “Bringing Abandoned Mine Lands Back to Life,” Environmental and Energy Study Institute, April 8, 2025, available at https://www.eesi.org/podcasts/view/9.4-bringing-abandoned-mine-lands-back-to-life.
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  99. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, “Charging Forward: Revitalizing Brownfield Sites into Electric Vehicle Charging Stations” (Washington: 2021), available at https://www.epa.gov/system/files/documents/2021-09/revitalizing-brownfield-sites-into-electric-vehicle-charging-stations.pdf.
  100. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, “RE-Powering America’s Land,” available at https://www.epa.gov/re-powering (last accessed October 2025).
  101. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, “RE-Powering Tracking Matrix,” available at https://www.epa.gov/re-powering/re-powering-tracking-matrix (last accessed October 2025).
  102. Ibid.
  103. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, “Data Documentation for Mapping and Screening Criteria for Renewable Energy Generation Potential on EPA- And State-Tracked Sites.”

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Alia Hidayat

Senior Policy Analyst, Conservation Policy

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