New Hanover County, NC — Solar Development Risk Assessment

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

31.7
Risk Grade
Excellent
SE NC coastal; Wilmington (UNCW) area; urban coastal; limited utility-scale land; commercial/campus solar primary; coastal ecology
Assessment Snapshot
Population
233,450
State Rank
#4
Compliance
50%
Trajectory
42

Moratorium Status

✓ No Active Moratorium
No Moratorium

Ordinance & Regulations

Setback Requirements
None codified. No confirmed county-specific setbacks.
Zoning Mechanism
New Hanover County Board of Adjustment/Board of Commissioners: Special Use Permit (SUP) or Conditional Use Permit (CUP).
Acreage Caps
None codified.
Density Caps
None codified.
Spacing Rules
None codified.
Size Restrictions
None codified.

Board Sentiment & Political Risk

Sentiment Analysis
Very favorable — UNCW progressive; Wilmington growing; active commercial solar; coastal ecology sensitivity; land constraint
Basis for Assessment
SE NC coastal; Wilmington (UNCW) area; urban coastal; limited utility-scale land; commercial/campus solar primary; coastal ecology
Political Risk Factors
Improving
Board Members
[Board of Commissioners] | See county website | Non-Partisan | Term Expires: See county website

Grid, Utilities & State Context

Grid Operator
SERC / Duke Energy Progress (DEP) zone
Utilities
Duke Energy Progress, Duke Energy Progress
State Permitting Process
Full local control — no statewide preemption for siting and permitting of utility-scale solar. County Board of Commissioners issues Special Use Permit (SUP) or Conditional Use Permit (CUP) for utility-scale solar under county Unified Development Ordinance (UDO). All sizes subject to local zoning; no threshold for state takeover. NCUC Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity (CPCN) required for utility-owned generation; IPP developers selling to Duke/Dominion under PURPA or competitive procurement typically handle NCUC process through utility. NC DEQ: decommissioning plan registration required for ≥2 MW (SL 2023-58, eff. Nov 1 2025); DEQ rules (15A NCAC 01V) effective April 1, 2025. NC land use law (2021) modernized ordinance language and clarified solar provisions. N.C.G.S. §160D-107: counties may adopt temporary moratoria on solar permits (limited duration, must be reasonable). Davidson County: 24-month moratorium enacted Dec 17, 2024 (expires Dec 2026) while developing new solar ordinance. Halifax County: temporary moratorium Oct 2024 — expired Feb 2025; new ordinance provisions pending. Farmland preservation concerns are the dominant local issue — NC has lost significant prime farmland to solar. Grid: SERC throughout NC. Duke Energy Progress (eastern/central), Duke Energy Carolinas (western/piedmont/mountains), Dominion Energy NC (northeastern corner). NC EMCs serve rural areas as distribution cooperatives.
State Incentives
NC REPS (Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Portfolio Standard): 12.5% by 2021 (met); Duke Energy Carolina/Progress subject to ongoing carbon plan compliance (100% clean by 2050). Duke Energy CPRE (Competitive Procurement of Renewable Energy) program: ongoing solicitations. NC CPCN process for utility-owned facilities via NCUC. Community solar/Green Source Advantage: Duke Energy program for large commercial customers. Net metering under Duke Energy 'Smart Saver' program (NCUC approved 3-year glide path 2025). Property tax PILOT: county-negotiated agreements common. Utility: Duke Energy Progress (eastern/central NC); Duke Energy Carolinas (western/Piedmont NC); NCEMC and local EMCs serve rural areas.

Development Activity

Active/Completed Projects
No confirmed utility-scale ground-mount solar in New Hanover County. New Hanover County CONFIRMED as the only coastal NC county without utility-scale solar (EnergyNC 2021 local government clean energy report) due to high population density and lack of available inland acreage. Duke Energy Progress and DEP serve New Hanover County. Wilmington urban area: rooftop/commercial solar active.
Denied/Withdrawn Projects
No applicable ground-mount denials — geography/density precludes utility-scale.

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