Mecklenburg County, VA — Solar Development Risk Assessment

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

74.8
Risk Grade
Fail
Article 20 (Apr 2025) removes utility-scale as permitted use — functional ban. CRITICAL: HB 711/SB 347 — if signed, Mecklenburg's ban becomes illegal and must be repealed or amended to allow SE applications. Risk trajectory shifts from Worsening toward Stable once legislation signed, but board hostility remains; denials via SE process still possible.
Assessment Snapshot
Population
29,031
State Rank
#41
Compliance
90%
Trajectory
80

Moratorium Status

✓ No Active Moratorium
No Moratorium

Ordinance & Regulations

Setback Requirements
Mecklenburg County-specific SE/SUP conditions control — county-set setbacks vary from 50 ft (rural) to 300+ ft (residential adjacent). Verify current Mecklenburg County zoning ordinance for adopted local setback standards.
Zoning Mechanism
Utility-scale solar removed (no longer allowed as new land use); small/medium-scale allowed with limits in specified districts.
Acreage Caps
Utility-scale removed; ordinance amendment packet references caps/controls for remaining categories.
Density Caps
No countywide density cap formally adopted; Article 20 (Apr 2025) removes utility-scale as permitted use going forward
Spacing Rules
Ordinance amendment packet references distance controls relative to other solar facilities (applied to remaining categories).
Size Restrictions
Utility-scale removed; remaining categories include acreage limits (see amendment packet).

Board Sentiment & Political Risk

Sentiment Analysis
Restrictive turn / solar fatigue
Basis for Assessment
Reported decision to bar future utility-scale solar suggests a strong political shift away from new projects.
Political Risk Factors
Worsening
Board Members
Gary Fisher | R | Jan 2028 Andrew Graham | R | Jan 2028 Kevin Massengill | R | Jan 2028 Overton McGhee | R | Jan 2028 Bobby Clanton | R | Jan 2028 Steve Dunn | R | Jan 2028

Grid, Utilities & State Context

Grid Operator
PJM / Dominion Energy Virginia (DEV) transmission zone
Utilities
Mecklenburg Electric Co-op (MEC), Dominion Energy Virginia (DEV)
State Permitting Process
Local permit: Special Use Permit (SUP) or Conditional Use Permit (CUP) in A-1 Agricultural zoning; issued by Board of Supervisors (BOS) or Planning Commission per county ordinance. Counties without zoning (Buchanan, Russell, Lee, Scott, etc.) proceed via revenue-sharing siting agreements. SCC CPCN: Va. Code §56-580 (as amended by HB 1558/SB 762, eff. Jul 2021) — SCC Certificate of Public Convenience & Necessity required for generating facilities ≥5 MW; waivable for utility-owned projects under SCC-approved IRP. DEQ Permit by Rule (PBR): Required for all solar facilities ≥1 MW per Va. Code §10.1-1197.6; includes VSMP/VPDES erosion & stormwater permits. Mar 2022 DEQ rule: solar panels counted as impervious surface same as parking lots. Revenue sharing: Va. Code §15.2-2288.7 — localities may require up to $1,400/MW-year for utility-scale solar on agricultural or forestal land; increases 10% in year 1 then every 5 years thereafter. VDACS notice: VA Dept. of Agriculture & Consumer Services must be notified for projects converting prime agricultural or forestal land. PENDING LEGISLATION (as of Mar 11, 2026): HB 711 (Herring) / SB 347 (VanValkenburg) both cleared both chambers and await Gov. Spanberger's signature (session ends Mar 14, 2026). If signed: (1) all localities must allow solar ≥1 MW via special exception — outright bans illegal; (2) statewide setback floor: 150–200 ft non-participating dwellings, 50–100 ft from state roads, 100–250 ft from streams/wetlands, 50–75 ft from property lines; (3) localities retain denial authority but must report reasons to SCC public database; (4) companion HB 891/SB 443: BESS permitted accessory use on approved solar SE sites. Spanberger is pro-solar; signature expected. Monitor: lis.virginia.gov.
State Incentives
Virginia Clean Economy Act (VCEA, 2020): Dominion must reach 100% carbon-free by 2045; Appalachian Power by 2050; major driver of utility-scale solar procurement. Net metering: available under VCEA for systems up to 1 MW (by-right); large-scale behind-the-meter negotiated. SCC SolarShare: Dominion program offering renewable energy credits. Virtual net metering (Virginia): programs vary by utility. DEQ review: required for solar facilities ≥150 MW (permit by rule) or DEQ standalone review. Utility: Dominion Energy Virginia serves 2/3 of VA; Appalachian Power (AEP) serves western VA; Northern Virginia Electric Coop (NOVEC) serves NoVA exurbs; various rural cooperatives and municipal utilities.

Development Activity

Active/Completed Projects
Three previously-approved projects in application pipeline allowed to continue after Apr 14 2025 board vote. Prior approvals under Article 20 §20.14 (2,325-acre county cap, 2023–2025).
Denied/Withdrawn Projects
All future utility-scale solar projects effectively denied — BOS voted Apr 14 2025 to remove utility-scale solar as allowable land use in all zoning districts. County now has de facto prohibition. Source: Cardinal News Apr 15 2025

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