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Health, Science & Environment

Ohio Supreme Court approves Licking County solar project

Solar panels tilt toward the sky as wildflowers bloom in the foreground.
Amazon
Solar panels at the 180-megawatt Madison Fields Solar project in Pike Township, Madison County. The project is one of about a dozen large-scale solar projects that have state approval, are under construction, or are currently operational in central Ohio.

A large solar project can begin construction after the Ohio Supreme Court ruled Wednesday in the project's favor.

The Ohio Supreme Court affirmed the Ohio Power Siting Board’s 2022 decision to grant Harvey Solar Project a certificate of environmental compatibility and public need. A citizens group called Save Hartford Township and 11 residents appealed the project’s approval, leaving it in limbo as the state’s highest court deliberated.

Harvey Solar is a 350 megawatt project slated for some 2,600 acres of private property in Bennington and Hartford Townships in Licking County.

The project’s developer, Texas-based Open Road Renewables, reports it will be able to power around 350,000 homes. Open Road also expects the project to bring in $3.15 million in annual property taxes and to create around 300 local construction jobs.

Save Hartford Township in its appeal argued that Harvey Solar didn’t evaluate the “economic disadvantage” of solar and didn’t conduct a proper study on possible night noise generated by the project, among other allegations. Ultimately, environmental lawyer Jack Van Kley didn’t convince judges that the OPSB, which approves energy projects in Ohio, made a mistake in allowing Harvey Solar to move forward.

Justices R. Patrick DeWine, Patrick F. Fisher, Jennifer Brunner, Joseph T. Deters, Daniel R. Hawkins and Megan E. Shanahan ruled that the residents opposing the facility failed to prove the board acted unlawfully or unreasonably. Chief Justice Sharon L. Kennedy concurred in judgement only, saying the opponents of the project failed to show sufficient evidence.

“With the Supreme Court’s ruling, we will begin moving forward to construction. Not only will the local community benefit from the project, but it will generate clean, affordable, homegrown energy to help meet Ohio’s growing demand for power,” said Samantha Sawmiller, director of development for Open Road Renewables, in a statement.

The project is expected to take 18 to 24 months to build.

Corrected: May 2, 2025 at 8:16 AM EDT
A previous version of this story spelled Ohio Supreme Chief Justice Sharon Kennedy's name wrong.
Allie Vugrincic has been a radio reporter at WOSU 89.7 NPR News since March 2023 and has been the station's mid-day radio host since January 2025.