Whiteside County, IL — Solar Development Risk Assessment

Local solar ordinance barriers, board sentiment, and utility policies that affect development timelines and risk.

45.8
Risk Grade
Good
Very high saturation; permissive culture; stable trajectory.
Assessment Snapshot
Population
55,175
State Rank
#14
Compliance
20%
Trajectory
50

Moratorium Status

✓ No Active Moratorium
No Moratorium

Ordinance & Regulations

Setback Requirements
State floor applies: ≥50 ft from property line; ≥150 ft from non-participating residence; ≥50 ft from road ROW. No county-specific setbacks above this floor.
Zoning Mechanism
Whiteside County: CUP or Special Use Permit in Agricultural (A-1) district.
Acreage Caps
None codified.
Density Caps
None codified.
Spacing Rules
None codified.
Size Restrictions
None codified.

Board Sentiment & Political Risk

Sentiment Analysis
Strongly supportive / revenue-focused
Basis for Assessment
County Board vote history; ZBA records; IPA ABP registry
Political Risk Factors
Stable
Board Members
County Board | Scott Findley | R | Term Expires: 2026 (Chair); complete roster at whitesidecountyil.gov/186/County-Board

Grid, Utilities & State Context

Grid Operator
MISO / Ameren Illinois Transmission (AIT) zone (verify for projects near MISO/PJM boundary)
Utilities
ComEd (Exelon / Constellation), MidAmerican Energy (western strip)
State Permitting Process
Local permit: Special Use Permit (SUP) in A-1 Agricultural zoning via county Zoning Board of Appeals (ZBA) and/or County Board; process and conditions vary by county ordinance. ICC CPCN: Illinois Public Utilities Act §8-406 — Illinois Commerce Commission (ICC) Certificate of Public Convenience & Necessity required for ALL generating facilities >2 MW, regardless of local SUP status; ICC process runs parallel to county SUP. PA 102-1123 (signed Jan 27, 2023): Preempts county ordinances that prohibit wind or solar; sets state minimum setback floor of ≥150 ft from non-participating property lines and ≥300 ft from occupied dwellings. Counties may set higher setbacks but not lower; wind/solar bans enacted before 2023 are invalidated. PA 103-0580 (Veto Session fall 2023): Trailer bill reinforcing PA 102-1123 preemption framework; addressed specific county attempts to circumvent preemption. CEJA 2021 (Climate & Equitable Jobs Act): Illinois RPS targets — 40% by 2030, 50% by 2040, 100% clean energy by 2045; IPA Illinois Shines program administers FEJA/CEJA incentive tranches for community and utility-scale solar.
State Incentives
Illinois Adjustable Block Program (Illinois Shines): 15-year SREC contracts for net-metered and community solar projects; administered by IL SHINES program. Solar for All (SFA): low-income community solar program with enhanced incentives. Illinois RPS: 50% renewable by 2040 (Future Energy Jobs Act); solar carve-out drives strong SREC demand. Net metering: available for ≤2 MW behind-the-meter systems (ComEd, Ameren IL). PACE financing: available in many IL counties. HB 4412 (2024): updated solar siting framework; county commission approval required for projects exceeding acreage thresholds in unincorporated areas. Utility: ComEd serves northern IL (Cook + 10 counties); Ameren Illinois serves central/southern IL; electric cooperatives serve rural downstate areas.

Development Activity

Active/Completed Projects
Sterling Solar (MidAmerican Energy) | ~150 MW / ~1,200 acres | SUP Approved 2021 | Operational Morrison Solar (NextEra Energy) | ~100 MW / ~800 acres | SUP Approved 2022 | Under development Multiple utility-scale applications | 50–200 MW | 2018–2024 ComEd / MidAmerican Energy territory; NW Illinois farmland; strong transmission access
Denied/Withdrawn Projects
Unnamed solar project | Size TBD | Application denied | Apr 2024 | Reason: County board denied application despite state law requirement; settled subsequent lawsuit

Explore the Full Tracker

View risk assessments for all 3,100+ US counties, compare states, and download detailed ordinance data for your solar development pipeline.

Launch SolarRisk Tracker