Atlantic County, NJ — Solar Development Risk Assessment

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

43.1
Risk Grade
Good
Atlantic City tourism county; Pinelands constrains interior; CAFRA restricts coastal siting; agricultural portions outside Pinelands viable; active solar market
Assessment Snapshot
Population
274,534
State Rank
#13
Compliance
52%
Trajectory
45

Moratorium Status

✓ No Active Moratorium
No Moratorium

Ordinance & Regulations

Setback Requirements
None codified at county level. Municipal setbacks govern (no county-level zoning authority).
Zoning Mechanism
Municipal Planning Board: D variance or use variance in applicable zoning district.
Acreage Caps
None codified at county level.
Density Caps
None codified at county level.
Spacing Rules
None codified at county level.
Size Restrictions
None codified at county level.

Board Sentiment & Political Risk

Sentiment Analysis
Moderate — tourism identity; Pinelands and CAFRA constraints; some agricultural opportunity
Basis for Assessment
Atlantic City tourism county; Pinelands constrains interior; CAFRA restricts coastal siting; agricultural portions outside Pinelands viable; active solar market
Political Risk Factors
Stable
Board Members
County Executive: Dennis Levinson (R) | Jan 2027 (elected 2022, 4-yr term). Commissioner Board (9 members; R majority with some D): See atlanticcountynj.gov for current roster | Terms staggered through Nov 2027

Grid, Utilities & State Context

Grid Operator
PJM / Atlantic City Electric (AEP) transmission zone
Utilities
Atlantic City Electric (AEP), Atlantic City Electric (AEP)
State Permitting Process
Local municipal zoning approval required; no statewide preemption of local ordinances. DEP Office of Permitting and Project Navigation: coordination required for large non-rooftop solar (CAFRA permits for coastal areas, Freshwater Wetlands, Flood Hazard, Stormwater). BPU SREC-II pre-construction registration required for incentive eligibility. PJM interconnection required. NJ Pinelands Commission approval required for projects in Pinelands Area. Historic districts (Cape May, Princeton) require architectural review board approval. DEP Guidance Document for Construction of Solar PV Arrays available at dep.nj.gov/cleanenergy.
State Incentives
NJ SuSI SREC-II (Successor Solar Incentive) Program: fixed $85/MWh payment for 15 years for net-metered systems <5 MW; grid supply solar subject to competitive TRECs/variable rate. NJ Sales Tax Exemption: solar equipment purchases fully exempt. NJ Successor Solar Incentive (SuSI) Registered Solar Program: for larger commercial arrays. NJ Community Solar: pilot program expanded to permanent program 2024 (Board of Public Utilities). NJ RPS: 35% renewable by 2025; 50% by 2030; significant solar carve-out. Utility: PSE&G serves northern NJ; JCP&L (FirstEnergy) serves central NJ; Atlantic City Electric (Exelon/ACE) serves southern NJ; Rockland Electric serves Bergen/Essex/Warren areas.

Development Activity

Active/Completed Projects
Multiple solar projects in Atlantic County — ACE territory | Shore region; Hammonton area agricultural land for utility-scale | SuSI and CSEP programs active
Denied/Withdrawn Projects
No confirmed denial on record for Atlantic County. NJ solar governed at municipal level (565 municipalities) — denial data fragmented. Key NJ restriction: Pinelands Commission limits solar in 1.1M-acre Pinelands area (applies in Burlington, Ocean, Atlantic, Cumberland, Camden, Cape May, Gloucester counties). NJBPU CSEP and Community Solar programs govern incentives. Source: NJ MLUL N.J.S.A. 40A:55D; Pinelands Commission; NJBPU

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