Windham solid waste
The headquarters of Windham Solid Waste Management District in Brattleboro, where officials are pursuing development of a 5 megawatt solar array on a closed landfill. File photo by Mike Faher/VTDigger

[B]RATTLEBORO โ€” A large-scale and specially legislated solar array to be built atop Brattleboro’s closed landfill is supposed to bring big financial benefits to 19 towns.

But progress on the 5 megawatt project has stalled, and landowner Windham Solid Waste Management District is talking with solar companies to formulate a Plan B if current developer Pristine Sun doesnโ€™t meet contractual milestones.

District officials say they remain optimistic the solar array will become reality, and they’re hopeful that San Francisco-based Pristine can pull it off. But both the developer and the district face upcoming deadlines to get the project moving again.

โ€œWe have not seen any progress except for their filing for a (power grid) interconnection,โ€ said Bob Spencer, Windham Solid Waste’s executive director. โ€œThis is very concerning, because this is a project that has an economic value of over $20 million to our member towns over 20 years.โ€

Pristine Sun Chief Executive Officer Troy Helming acknowledged the delays and said his company is just emerging from a lengthy legal dispute that had left it unable to raise money for development.

โ€œWe’re going to do our level best to meet all those milestones (in Brattleboro),โ€ Helming said in an interview Friday. โ€œWe’ve been transparent with the people at the solid waste district and have provided open lines of communication.โ€

Windham Solid Waste provides recycling and waste management services and is supported by 19 member towns, most of which are in Windham County. Additionally, the district has a closed, capped landfill off Old Ferry Road in Brattleboro.

The district has faced a cash crunch in recent years, partly due to a declining market for recyclables. So officials believe one way to save money is development of a solar array via Vermont’s net metering law, which allows utility customers to receive credit on their electric bills for generating power via smaller-scale, renewable energy systems.

As the solar array is now designed, officials project that a typical Windham Solid Waste member town’s electric savings would start at 38 percent of its power bill in the first year and could climb to 61 percent in the final year of a 20-year power purchase agreement.

Under normal circumstances, a 5 megawatt array like the one proposed by Windham Solid Waste would be too large to be a net-metered project. But a state energy law approved in 2014 included a provision allowing a net-metered array generating up to 5 megawatts to be built โ€œon a closed landfill in Windham County.โ€

District officials have pursued the complex landfill solar project cautiously, hiring an Ohio company to help find the right developer. Windham Solid Waste inked a long-term deal with Pristine Sun last summer.

It calls for no significant upfront investment by the district, as Pristine must fund development of the array. But officials now say work has not progressed as had been promised.

โ€œWe still have an existing lease with Pristine Sun,โ€ Spencer said. โ€œBut we have been concerned that Pristine is not meeting certain milestones that are spelled out in their contract with us.โ€

Examples of unfinished work, Spencer said, include a survey of the property to allow for a final design; an interconnection analysis with Green Mountain Power; and power purchase agreements with member towns.

This work, officials say, is supposed to be done by the one-year anniversary of the deal with Pristine Sun. That anniversary is in late July.

โ€œThese are contractual milestones that probably will cost on the order of $300,000 for the developer and take significant time,โ€ Spencer said.

Windham Solid Waste has a deadline of its own to meet: The special provision in state law that allows this solar project to qualify as net-metered also says the developer must apply for a state certificate of public good before Jan. 1.

Helming said he’s aware of that deadline as well as the schedule set forth in his company’s contract with Windham Solid Waste. But he said Pristine’s development work has been significantly hampered by a failed joint venture with a former partner company.

Pristine signed a settlement agreement with that partner last week, Helming said. โ€œIt was a very positive outcome for Pristine Sun, but it cost us almost a year of development because of not being able to raise capital,โ€ he said.

Helming said Pristine now has a smaller staff, but โ€œwe have enough people to develop the project in Vermont. We’re very excited.โ€

He could not say for sure, however, whether the company still can adhere to the schedule called for in the contract. Helming said one option might be to ask the district for more time. โ€œWe have to analyze the risk-return profile of investing a lot of money (at Windham Solid Waste) in the next few weeks,โ€ he said.

Spencer and Lou Bruso, chairman of Windham Solid Waste’s board of supervisors, say they’ve communicated their concerns to Helming.

Bruso said he’s still โ€œmildly optimisticโ€ about Pristine’s development plans, though โ€œnot optimistic enough to assume that they’re going to be able to do it.โ€

That’s why the district’s executive board has been holding closed-door contractual talks with other solar companies that have approached Windham Solid Waste about the landfill opportunity. Spencer said it appears three companies are in the mix, and the board is expected to make a recommendation soon to the full board on entering into negotiations with a possible alternate contractor.

Spencer said the plan is to โ€œhave a lease ready to execute by the end of Julyโ€ if Pristine doesn’t come through.

โ€œWe’re hoping Pristine Sun is still on track,โ€ Spencer said. โ€œThey have a very attractive proposal, and we’re hanging in there with them.โ€

Twitter: @MikeFaher. Mike Faher reports on health care and Vermont Yankee for VTDigger. Faher has worked as a daily newspaper journalist for 19 years, most recently as lead reporter at the Brattleboro...

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