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Resistance grows against New York's 18 planned solar farms locals say ruin land, kill animals and won't create much energy
Chadwick Moo · 2026-05-26 · via New York Post

New York is strong-arming 18 industrial-scale solar power plants into rural communities across the state despite strong opposition from locals. 

Schuylerville farmer Alexandra Fasulo had just settled into the idyllic acreage she purchased in 2023 when Governor Kathy Hochul’s bulldozers came roaring in, poised to thrash 1,800 acres of protected grassland to build a 100-megawatt-capacity solar energy complex in nearby Fort Edward, NY.

Alexandra Fasulo holding a black chicken with red comb.

“We were like serfs coming before a king. It was so much worse than I ever imagined,” Schuylerville farmer Alexandra Fasulo told The Post. Alexandra Fasulo

The Fort Edward Solar footprint area shows a vast expanse of green and brown fields with scattered trees and buildings, bordered by distant mountains under a cloudy sky.

The footprint of the massive, 1,800 acre Fort Edward Solar power plant in upstate New York. Local feel helpless and infuriated as the state squashes any dissent on the massive, wildlife-killing green energy plant. Alexandra Fasulo

Worried chemical run-off and contamination may affect her farm, Fasulo attended a town meeting last fall to voice concerns to developers and state authorities.

“We were like serfs coming before a king. It was so much worse than I ever imagined,” Fasulo, 33, told The Post.

Sign that reads "Stop Boralex" in a field with a "State Land Wildlife Management Area" sign and a "Restricted Area" sign.

Canadian company Boralex has gobbled up clean energy contracts across the state and their latest project is a 100 MW capacity solar farm in idyllic Fort Edward, NY. Alexandra Fasulo

A short-eared owl in flight over a partially snow-covered field at the Fort Edward Wildlife Management Area.

The Fort Edward site, pictured here, is a wildlife preserve and bird habitat home to the endangered short eared owl and the threatened norther harrier. Alexandra Fasulo

“There was nearly unanimous opposition to this project. So, I thought it wouldn’t go through. That’s how representative democracy works, right? Wrong.”

New York’s green energy mandate came into effect with 2019’s Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (CLCPA) which requires 70 percent of statewide electricity to come from “renewable” sources; a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions to 40 percent below 1990 levels and at least 3,000 megawatts of energy storage capacity.

All this is supposed to happen by year 2030—but the deadline keeps getting pushed back.

To accomplish her Herculean green feat, Hochul set up the Office of Renewable Energy Siting and Electric Transmission (ORES)—an agency charged with getting the projects rammed through by cutting red tape, torching environmental impact reports and squashing local pushback.

New York Governor Kathy Hochul speaking at a press conference.

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul’s Office of Renewable Energy Siting and Electric Transmission (ORES) was established to ram through green energy projects by cutting red tape, torching environmental impact reports and squashing local pushback Stephen Yang for NY Post

Map showing the general location of the proposed Fort Edward Solar facility in relation to the boundaries of the grassland bird landscapes of conservation concern.

The Fort Edwards site, in red, is plopped in the middle of a state-recognized wildlife sanctuary. Grassland Bird Trust/ American Land Rescue Fund

Each of the 18 sites ORES has selected will have a capacity over 25 megawatts. The agency also has an additional dozen wind projects in the works.

Some of the largest projects are the 4,000 acre, 500-megawatt Cider Solar Farm in Genesee County and the 2,000 acre Ridge View Solar Farm in Niagara County, as shown on The Post’s map.

To add insult to injury, many of the multi-billion dollar solar contracts have been farmed out to foreign companies—including Canada’s Boralex, France’s EDF Renewables, and South Korea’s Cypress Creek Renewables, The Post has found. 

Two excavators with grapple attachments clearing a forest for new development.

Forests across the state are being clear cut for vast solar fields while environmental groups remain silent. MaxSafaniuk – stock.adobe.com

Aerial view of a solar energy farm at sunset in South Wales, UK.

Studies show actual energy output will be about 15 percent of total capacity for each plant in upstate New York, given the gloomy climate.  Stephen Davies – stock.adobe.com

The sweeping fields of shimmering panels will generate only a “pathetic” amount of electricity in cold, cloudy upstate New York, Fasulo claims.

Critics point out that while sites like Fort Edwards are billed as 100-megawatt power plants, studies like those from the New York Independent System Operator show actual output will be about 15 percent of that number, given the gloomy climate. 

Even with relentless sunshine, solar power plants have proved ineffective and burdensome. California’s $2.2 billion Ivanpah Solar Power Facility in the Mojave Desert is set to close this year after only a decade in operation, citing inefficiency and outdated tech.

A winter landscape of Copake Lake, with snow-covered trees and houses on the shore reflecting in the still water under a clear blue sky.

The bucolic village of Copake, NY is preparing for an onslaught of earthmovers and dump trucks as the state is forcing a colossal solar energy plant onto local residents–who say it will forever change their rural community. Kyle Tunis – stock.adobe.com

A person crosses the intersection of Church and East Main Streets in Canajoharie, New York.

The village of Canajoharie, NY in Montgomery County is bracing for Big Solar. The county is suing ORES claiming “unlawful” permitting process. Houston Chronicle via Getty Images

Locals battling the projects told The Post solar panels are easily damaged in storms, need to be replaced every 15 years and create no local jobs.

Taking on ORES has turned into a Kafkaesque nightmare, said Fasulo.

“It’s a shadow agency. They don’t pick up the phone. They don’t answer emails. You can’t make a physical appointment with them.”

In a statement to The Post, an ORES spokeswoman said, “The staff at ORES take their responsibility for permitting these energy resources very seriously, including incorporating critical input from communities, and are focused on ensuring the best outcome for New York State consumers in every decision that comes before ORES.”

Fort Edward Solar redacted document with black boxes over specific information.

After her FOIL request for the environmental impact report came back heavily redacted, Fasulo commissioned her own report. Alexandra Fasulo

A person holding open a binder filled with pages that have been redacted to hide confidential information regarding the Fort Edward Solar project.

Fasulo shows off entire pages of redacted texts from the ORES environmental impact report on the Fort Edwards solar power plant. “It looked like the Epstein files,” she told The Post. Alexandra Fasulo

Fed up, Fasulo used the Freedom of Information Law to obtain the agency’s local wildlife impact report for the Fort Edward site and was flabbergasted at what came back.

“It was so heavily redacted it looked like the Epstein files,” she said, referencing the heavily amended portions of the millions of files on the pervert financier released by the government.

It led her to commission her own report from conservation nonprofit Hudsonia.

Flock of birds in a grassy field with trees in the background.

The protected grassland bird habitat site of the Fort Edwards solar power plant that will be an 1,800 acre, 100-megawatt capacity project. Alexandra Fasulo

A brown and white hawk with outstretched wings and talons descends.

A hawk soars in the Fort Edwards Wildlife Management Area. The species impacted by the development include the endangered short-eared owl (fewer than 50 breeding pairs remain in the state, per the Grassland Bird Trust), the threatened northern harrier and 15 species of reptiles and amphibians of “conservation concern,” among many others. Alexandra Fasulo

That report, reviewed by The Post, shows the Fort Edwards site sits inside a NYS Department of Environmental Conservation-managed grassland and bird sanctuary “well known for high species diversity of breeding grassland birds and important numbers of wintering raptors including an Endangered and a Threatened species,” the report stated.

The species impacted by the development include the endangered short-eared owl (fewer than 50 breeding pairs remain in the state, per the Grassland Bird Trust), the threatened northern harrier and 15 species of reptiles and amphibians of “conservation concern,” among many others.

100 miles south in the bucolic Hudson Valley town of Copake, local resident Sara Traberman has made fighting Big Solar her full-time job. Chicago-based developer Hecate Energy scooped up over 700 acres of productive farmland to install a planned 42-megawatt capacity solar facility, expected to go online late next year.

A sign for an "Important Bird Area" at Fort Edward Wildlife Management Area.

Signs around the Fort Edward Wildlife Management Area call attention to the local bird population. Alexandra Fasulo

Sign for Washington County Grasslands Wildlife Management Area.

The sweeping fields of shimmering, toxic panels will generate only a “pathetic” amount of electricity in cold, cloudy upstate New York, Fasulo claims. Alexandra Fasulo

Locals were told to expect two years of nonstop construction where 547 dump trucks and ten pile drivers along with numerous cranes and excavators will swarm the picturesque hamlet from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. — seven days a week.

“It’s about changing the character of this town. It’s a rural, farming community. We just ask that the rules of the town and the view of what the people want for where they live is respected,” Traberman told The Post.

“It’s going to impact tourism, local traffic, the schools. It’s going to be horrible.”

An assessment by NYS Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation found that solar plant also will have an adverse impact on five historic and cultural sites in the area, with viewsheds decimated by a sea of gleaming silicon.

A closed business with a stone chimney and peeling roof in the foreground, with a field, farm buildings, and the Taconic Ridge in the background.

“It’s going to impact tourism, local traffic, the schools. It’s going to be horrible,” Copake resident Sara Traberman told The Post. Tyler A. McNeil / Wikipedia

A woman speaks at a podium with a "Save Our Farmland" sign in front of her.

“There was nearly unanimous opposition to this project. So, I thought it wouldn’t go through. That’s how representative democracy works, right? Wrong,” farmer turned activist Fasulo said. Alexandra Fasulo

“[CLCPA] was a nice idea but it was put in place by ideologues. It wasn’t thought through properly and has these timelines that everyone has now acknowledged are not feasible. A cost assessment was never done. And where’s the energy going? We don’t know,” she added.

The state claims solar energy is necessary to thwart the critical, statewide emergency of “climate change.” While Article IX of the New York State constitution grants local authorities power to legislate land use, the Hochul administration has argued the state has a substantial interest in selling it off to green energy developers.

Award-winning Princeton University physicist William Happer claimed to The Post the supposed climate emergency was “non-existent” and long disproven, adding that the solar scheme was “designed to keep politicians fat and happy.”

Headshot of William Happer, an older man with light brown hair, wearing a dark suit, white shirt, and dark tie, smiling softly against a white background.

Princeton University physicist William Happer told The Post the supposed climate emergency was “non-existent” and long disproven, adding that the solar scheme was “designed to keep politicians fat and happy.” William Happer

Meghan Manion, a woman with long light brown hair, smiles at the camera while wearing a black blazer and a red top.

Montgomery County Attorney Meghan Manion said her litigation against the state challenges “the grossly unlawful actions of ORES,” which “deviated from lawful procedure by choosing not to follow their own regulations in granting these [solar] permits.” Meghan Manion

“The public has been brainwashed,” Happer said. “There’s no evidence whatsoever of a climate emergency. There’s been no change in frequency of extreme weather. The sea level rise in New York is on the order of two millimeters per year, about the same as it’s been for the last two centuries.”

He claimed the climate scare is purely profit-driven. “It’s just the latest protection racket,” he alleged.

Federally Donald Trump has cancelled billions in solar grants and froze wind farm leasing on federal land.

In April, ORES boss Zeryai Hagos suddenly quit amid an avalanche of lawsuits against the projects, but so far judges have sided with the Hochul administration, leaving rural New Yorkers further disillusioned.

Montgomery County, west of Schenectady, is the latest local government to sue ORES. Developers were permitted to gobble up 6,400 acres—most of it active farmland—for two massive solar complexes near the towns of Canajoharie and Root.

Michael Muhlebeck in a blue suit with a blue tie.

“Our county is one of the poorest in the state and that’s why we’re being targeted,” Montgomery County lawmaker Michael Muhlebeck said. “New York State has taken more and more from our communities and they’ve literally just shut us down. We no longer have the right to protect our residents.” Michael Muhlebeck

Aerial view of a large solar energy farm in Asia.

New York’s green energy mandate came into effect with 2019’s Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (CLCPA) which requires 70 percent of statewide electricity to come from “renewable” sources; a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions to 40 percent below 1990 levels and at least 3,000 megawatts of energy storage capacity. SOMPHOTO – stock.adobe.com

Montgomery County Attorney Meghan Manion told The Post the litigation challenges “the grossly unlawful actions of ORES,” which “deviated from lawful procedure by choosing not to follow their own regulations in granting these [solar] permits.”

While developers cover the cost of construction, locals have to eat revenue losses on property tax for the sites, Montgomery County lawmaker Michael Muhlebeck told The Post. He also said his constituents, who are “97 percent” opposed to the projects, will likely face higher utility costs due to the increased demand that often follows large industrial projects like this.

Then there’s the cost of decommission—estimated at $30 million for one Montgomery County site, according to a report commissioned by the county—if the solar company goes belly up or decides to ditch the project.

Montgomery County already has two inactive, decaying solar farms that have languished after being abandoned by developers, with no money to take them down.

“Our county is one of the poorest in the state and that’s why we’re being targeted,” Muhlebeck said. “New York State has taken more and more from our communities and they’ve literally just shut us down. We no longer have the right to protect our residents.

“But there’s a goal that has to be met. And that goal is bigger than our local communities, our wildlife, our wetlands. And they don’t care,” he added.