The city of Pittsfield, Massachusetts and Ameresco, an energy efficiency and renewable energy company, announced that the city’s newest municipal solar array at a former landfill is now in operation.
In 2015, the city contracted with Ameresco to design and build the 2.91-megawatt solar power generation facility on city land. Ameresco designed, built, owns and will operate and maintain the project at no charge to the city, in exchange for a 20-year PPA with Pittsfield to purchase the power that is generated. The system is expected to generate more than 3 million kilowatt-hours in the first year and over 58 million kilowatt-hours over the contract term.
“It is exciting to know that the city of Pittsfield continues to make great strides toward our energy consumption in an environmentally sustainable way,” said Mayor Linda Tyer. “Moreover, this collaboration will generate significant savings for the city over time and firmly positions Pittsfield as a proponent of green energy initiatives.”
Jim McGrath, the city’s open space manager, noted the solar array’s benefit to city land.
“This project creates the opportunity to give otherwise unusable land a new life by converting it into a site to generate solar energy. We’ve converted what was once a cost center for the city into a revenue-generating asset,” said McGrath.
The solar PPA provided a no-capital-cost approach for the city to utilize renewable energy. It also established a reduction in electricity cost from the utility grid because the city can continue to purchase discounted energy for the next 20 years. In addition to the reduced cost per kWh of energy, and the personal property tax revenue paid by Ameresco for the system, this project is estimated to save the city up to $140,000 annually with an estimated savings of $2.6 million over the duration of the contract.
“Ameresco is proud to continue our public-private partnership with the city of Pittsfield, for their landfill solar project at Downing Parkway. This project supports the city’s sustainability goals, contributing to making Pittsfield a cost-effective environmental leader in the Berkshires,” said Jim Walker, vice president, solar, Ameresco.
“Forward-thinking municipal leaders have recognized the economic and environmental benefits of installing solar PV on their landfills,” continued Walker. “Landfills are perfect sites for solar PV since the otherwise un-developable land can be turned into an economic development benefit for the municipality’s citizens.”
In addition to developing solar installations on landfills in other Massachusetts communities such as Lenox, Stockbridge, Northampton, Lowell, Acton, Braintree and Sudbury, Ameresco also operates five solar installations along the Massachusetts Turnpike with two more in final construction, as well as more than 110 large sites on municipal rooftops and parking canopies.
News item from Ameresco