6/17/2023 0 Comments Hydrological processes runoff![]() ![]() If there is evidence of noncompliance, the judge said he could issue daily fines.Īttorneys for the plaintiffs did not comment on the judge’s order. The companies must also submit monthly status reports to a to-be-determined “special master,” who will oversee the process. ![]() The companies must also plant permanent vegetation among the hundreds of panels on the site and hire an independent firm to sample discharges, to ensure sediment levels have returned to pre-construction levels. The new order requires the companies conduct a new hydrology study of the area prepare an erosion, sedimentation and pollution management plan and bolster the site’s runoff controls according to that plan. In his order, Land said that the jury’s sizeable award would not prevent future releases. The lake was repeatedly stained bright red by sediment after construction began on the solar project, photos introduced as evidence in the case showed. The plaintiffs in the case, Stewart County residents Shaun and Amie Harris, live downstream from the solar arrays on a 1,630-acre property that includes a 21-acre trophy fishing lake. Westwood Professional Services Inc., the engineering firm behind the project’s erosion and sedimentation control plan, was cleared of liability. The jury assigned $25 million in punitive damages to Silicon Ranch, and $50 million each to IEA and one of its subsidiaries, plus $10.5 million in compensatory damages against the three defendants. (IEA) - acted negligently and with intent to cause harm by not installing sufficient erosion controls around the site. In late April, a jury found the companies behind the project - Nashville-based solar power developer Silicon Ranch, and its contractor, Infrastructure and Energy Alternatives, Inc. In Georgia and other states with ample sunshine, big tech companies are turning to solar to meet their enormous energy demands and reduce their emissions of planet-warming greenhouse gases. Electricity from the site powers a Newton County data center owned by Meta - the parent company of Facebook and Instagram. ![]() The panels were installed in 2021 through a partnership between Silicon Ranch and Walton Electric Membership Corp. ![]()
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