Clallam County, WA — Solar Development Risk Assessment

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

42.5
Risk Grade
Good
Very low solar irradiance (3.3 kWh/m²/day) is the primary constraint; Olympic National Park and National Forest land coverage eliminates most utility-scale siting options.
Assessment Snapshot
Population
77,331
State Rank
#14
Compliance
45%
Trajectory
35

Moratorium Status

✓ No Active Moratorium
No Moratorium

Ordinance & Regulations

Setback Requirements
No county-specific solar setbacks; state building code minimums apply.
Zoning Mechanism
Clallam County: CUP in Rural Resource and Agricultural zones; Clallam County Planning Commission review.
Acreage Caps
None codified.
Density Caps
None codified.
Spacing Rules
None codified.
Size Restrictions
None codified.

Board Sentiment & Political Risk

Sentiment Analysis
Cautious/neutral — Olympic Peninsula geography; low irradiance fundamentally limits utility-scale viability; no significant developer activity
Basis for Assessment
Clallam County PUD serves eastern area; PSE serves some areas; Olympic National Park covers ~35% of county; no large solar developer activity due to 3.3 kWh/m²/day irradiance; Sequim area has slightly better microclimate
Political Risk Factors
Stable
Board Members
County Board of Commissioners (3 members) | Partisan elections | 4-yr terms | Clallam County Courthouse, Port Angeles WA

Grid, Utilities & State Context

Grid Operator
WECC / BPA Transmission — PSE and Clallam County PUD service territory; Olympic Peninsula grid
Utilities
Clallam County PUD, Puget Sound Energy (PSE)
State Permitting Process
Large facilities (≥350 MW nameplate): Washington EFSEC (Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council) has exclusive siting jurisdiction — state agency preempts all local permitting. Projects <350 MW: county-level conditional use permit (CUP) or special use permit (SUP) in agricultural or resource-zoned land; no statewide preemption floor for smaller projects. SEPA (State Environmental Policy Act): environmental review required for utility-scale projects; DNS, MDNS, or full EIS depending on county SEPA lead agency threshold. Growth Management Act (GMA): 29 WA counties must incorporate energy siting in comprehensive plans; some have adopted renewable energy elements. Shoreline Management Act (SMA): projects near shorelines require Shoreline Substantial Development Permit. Critical Areas Ordinances (CAO): wetlands, fish/wildlife habitat, flood zones, and geologically hazardous areas require county CAO compliance review. Agricultural land: county-specific farmland protection policies apply; prime farmland conversion may require additional findings under county comprehensive plan.
State Incentives
Washington Clean Energy Transformation Act (CETA/SB 5116, 2019): IOUs must be carbon-neutral by 2030; 100% carbon-free by 2045. Net metering: ≤100 kW for IOU customers (PSE, Avista, Pacific Power) under WUTC; PUDs set individual limits, most allow up to 100% of annual consumption offset. RESIP (Renewable Energy System Incentive Program): production-based incentives for systems ≤100 kW, funded by utilities under WUTC mandate. Sales & use tax exemption: solar PV equipment fully exempt (RCW 82.08.962). Property tax exemption: solar systems excluded from assessed value (RCW 84.36.635). Community solar: available through PSE, SnoPUD, Tacoma Power, Clark Public Utilities, and most WA PUDs. PACE financing: available in participating WA counties. Federal ITC: 30% investment tax credit (IRA 2022) for commercial and residential. Low-income adder: 10% bonus ITC for projects serving income-qualified communities (IRA §48E).

Development Activity

Active/Completed Projects
Very limited utility-scale solar activity; some residential rooftop in Port Angeles and Sequim; Clallam County PUD has a small solar net metering program.
Denied/Withdrawn Projects
No formal denials on record; low developer interest due to irradiance constraints.

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