Ferry County, WA — Solar Development Risk Assessment

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

44.8
Risk Grade
Good
Federal and tribal land dominance eliminates most utility-scale siting options; remote BPA grid access is a significant cost barrier; very low population density reduces rooftop opportunity.
Assessment Snapshot
Population
7,551
State Rank
#20
Compliance
40%
Trajectory
30

Moratorium Status

✓ No Active Moratorium
No Moratorium

Ordinance & Regulations

Setback Requirements
No county-specific solar setbacks; federal and tribal land regulations govern majority of county area.
Zoning Mechanism
Ferry County: CUP in Agricultural zones; Board of County Commissioners approval; federal and tribal consultation required for projects near reservation or national forest boundaries.
Acreage Caps
None codified.
Density Caps
None codified.
Spacing Rules
None codified.
Size Restrictions
None codified.

Board Sentiment & Political Risk

Sentiment Analysis
Neutral/low activity — federal and tribal land dominance limits developable area; remote grid requires significant investment; very low population base
Basis for Assessment
Avista and Inland Power & Light serve county; Colville Indian Reservation and Colville National Forest cover majority of land; limited Avista grid capacity; Confederation of Colville Tribes may pursue sovereign energy projects independently
Political Risk Factors
Stable
Board Members
County Board of Commissioners (3 members) | Partisan elections | 4-yr terms | Ferry County Courthouse, Republic WA

Grid, Utilities & State Context

Grid Operator
WECC / BPA Transmission — Avista / Inland Power & Light service territory; remote NE WA grid
Utilities
Avista Utilities, Inland Power & Light
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
No confirmed utility-scale solar projects on public record as of Apr 2026.
Denied/Withdrawn Projects
No formal denials on record; no significant developer activity reported.

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