Chesapeake Bay Watershed Solar Mapping & Prediction

Chesapeake Bay Watershed Solar Mapping & Prediction

With funding support from the Grayce B. Kerr Fund, Inc., Chesapeake Conservancy’s data science team developed a deep learning model that automatically maps ground-mounted solar arrays in satellite imagery. Using this AI system, annual maps were created of all solar arrays within Washington, D.C., Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania, New York, Virginia and West Virginia from 2017 to 2022. This dataset is the first of its kind and is publicly accessible. The results are published in the peer-reviewed journal Biological Conservation (July 2023).

 

“We thank the Grayce B. Kerr Fund, Inc., for helping us create data that can empower government leaders, land use planners and conservation professionals in the region,” said Michael Evans, Ph.D., a senior data scientist with Chesapeake Conservancy’s Conservation Innovation Center (CIC). “These data reveal the land use transitions associated with past solar energy growth, and the transitions we’re likely to see in the future if those trends continue.”

 

Findings

 

Among the findings: the six states and D.C. have been adding solar capacity at different rates, with Maryland and Virginia expanding most rapidly. Thus far, solar arrays have primarily replaced cultivated areas, including agricultural fields, pasture and timber lands, while avoiding morenatural land cover like deciduous forests and wetlands. Agriculture was both the most frequently converted land use in terms of total area and showed the highest strength of selection in terms of area converted to solar in proportion to available area.

 

“From a conservation perspective, we were encouraged to see natural areas being avoided over the past six years. In places where solar is replacing previously degraded land cover, these facilities may also present a unique opportunity to restore biodiversity and ecosystem services in the watershed if native vegetation is maintained in areas under and around arrays,” continued Dr. Evans.

 

Methodology

 

Using the observed rates and site characteristics of past solar buildout, the team forecasted and identified the areas within the watershed most likely to be developed for solar. At each observed solar array, the team recorded a suite of geospatial covariates, including slope, protected status, percent open/forest/impervious/cultivated landcover, distance to road, distance to the transmission line, housing density, median census tract income, population and agricultural suitability. These covariates were also measured at 5,000 randomly distributed non-solar locations.

 

The team modeled the time to solar development at these locations as a Weibull process in a hierarchical Bayesian framework, with rate of solar development a function of covariates and acceleration a function of the state. The data scientists found solar was more likely to be developed inplaces that were previously cultivated, closer to roads and had low agricultural suitability, and less likely to be developed in areas that were steep, protected and had high tree cover. Rate estimates indicated accelerating rates of development in Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania and Virginia.

 

Using these estimated coefficients, the team projected the relative time to development at 30 m resolution across five states and Washington, D.C. (West Virginia was excluded due to an absence of arrays detected during the study), which can be visualized through a public web application available here: cicapps.org/ches-bay-solar. In combination with regulatory and grid capacity data, this 30 m resolution heat map can help anticipate the location and impacts of future growth and inform synergistic siting.

 

Arrays were mapped for the Chesapeake Bay watershed. Colors indicate the year in which arrays were constructed.

The coauthors of the paper are Chesapeake Conservancy’s Senior Data Scientist Michael Evans, Ph.D., Data Science Lead/Senior Data Scientist Kumar Mainali, Ph.D., and three former Chesapeake Conservancy team members who have since pursued other professional opportunities: GeospatialProgram Manager Rachel Soobitsky, Geospatial Technology Manager Emily Mills and Vice President of Climate Strategy Susan Minnemeyer.

Read the publication “Predicting Patterns of Solar Energy Buildout to Identify Opportunities for Biodiversity Conservation” online via Science Direct.

2024

  • Chesapeake Conservancy Seeks Funding through America’s Ecosystem Restoration Initiative: America the Beautiful Challenge
  • Advocated for a Land and Water Conservation Fund allocation of $750,000 for Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge in the annual appropriations bill for Fiscal Year 2025

2023

Chesapeake Conservancy and partners worked to conserve 178 acres in Delaware and Maryland (in progress)

2022

  • Participate in master planning process for Nanticoke Crossing Park (ongoing)
  • Advocated for congressional earmark of $1.2million in funding for a new sewer pipe at Oyster House Park in Seaford

2021

  • The City of Seaford, Chesapeake Conservancy and partners celebrate the grand opening of Oyster House Park along the Nanticoke River
  • Nanticoke Crossing Park is opened in Sussex County, DE, along the Nanticoke River through REPI and Mt. Cuba Foundation funding
  • On the 51st anniversary of Earth Day, Chesapeake Conservancy along with many valued partners welcomed Deputy Defense Secretary Kathleen Hicks in Vienna, Maryland, as she visited the Middle Chesapeake Sentinel Landscape to highlight this Sentinel Landscape partnership
  • Partnership preserves 270 Acres in Wicomico County
  • Partnership Conserves 318 Acres in Dorchester County

2020

Partnership Conserves 438 Acres in Wicomico County

2019

  • USFWS, Chesapeake Conservancy, and Mt. Cuba Center Add 27 Acres to National Wildlife Refuge
  • Partnership Conserves 233 Acres of Farmland in Nanticoke Rural Legacy Area
  • Grand opening of Woodland Wharf’s improved public access to the Nanticoke with boat dock, canoe/kayak launch and other amenities

2018

  • USFWS, Chesapeake Conservancy, and Mt. Cuba Center Conserve 155 Acres through Two Projects on the Nanticoke River
  • Partnership Conserves 230-acre Farm, Linking Protected Areas to Create a 7,730-acre-Corridor of Conserved Lands

2017

Chesapeake Conservancy raised $1.5 millionto protect an additional 533 acres of land farmland that will helppreserve the rural character of the Sentinel Landscape and furtherthe mission of the federal, state, and non-profit partners

2016

The Department of Defense (DoD) nationallycompetitive REPI Challenge awarded $1 million to helpconserve lands located within the newly designated Naval Air StationPatuxent River and Atlantic Test Ranges Sentinel Landscape inSouthern Maryland and along the Nanticoke River

2015

  • The Departments of Agriculture, Defense, and the Interior designated the Nanticoke River and its surrounding areas as the Middle Chesapeake Sentinel Landscape
  • Chesapeake Conservancy raises $1.65 million to protect additional key properties along the Nanticoke River
  • USDA Regional Conservation Partnership Program (RCPP) selects the Chesapeake Bay is one of eight Critical Conservation Areas, including $5 million for a public-private conservation partnership in the Delmarva region

2014

  • Chesapeake Conservancy’s Nanticoke River proposal was awarded $1 million through the Department of Defense’s nationally competitive REPI Challenge to protect property along the Nanticoke to protect Naval Air Station Patuxent River readiness
  • Chesapeake Conservancy processed 1 m x 1 m, high resolution land use land cover data for the Nanticoke River watershed, enhancing decision making options for all of our partners
  • Chesapeake Conservancy, in partnership with Delaware Department of Natural Resources & Environmental Control (DNREC) and The Conservation Fund, conserved 17.7 acres of land along Chapel Branch, a tributary to the Nanticoke River near Seaford, DE
  • Chesapeake Conservancy Hosts National Conference on Landscape-Scale Conservation Initiatives

2013

Chesapeake Conservancy raised $1.5 million to protect key properties along the Nanticoke River

2012

Chesapeake Conservancy supports Delaware’s acquisition of Woodland Wharf, expanding public access to the Nanticoke River

2008

On the heels of the establishment of the John Smith Chesapeake Trail, the U.S. Department of the Interior, states of Delaware and Maryland, and the Chesapeake Conservancy signed an agreement to work together to protect the Nanticoke River

2006

Congress establishes the Captain John Smith Chesapeake National Historic Trail which includes the Nanticoke River