| This Maryland county will get its power from a solar farm on landfill 
 
   
 Michelle Lewis | Oct 10 2025 - 2:58 pm PT
 
 1 Comment
 
 
  Photo: Baltimore County 
 Baltimore County, Maryland, just brought its first large-scale  ground-mounted solar farm online, and it sits on what used to be the  Parkton Landfill. The 213-acre site, once a symbol of waste, is now  generating clean power that will cut costs, slash emissions, and turn an  underused piece of land into a long-term energy asset.
 
 Located north of Baltimore City, Baltimore County is one of  Maryland’s largest and most populous counties, and its push toward  renewables has major implications for the state’s climate and energy  goals.
 
 County Executive Kathy Klausmeier called the project a clear example  of innovation meeting sustainability: “We are cutting costs for  taxpayers and making investments that benefit our communities for  decades.”
 
 The new solar farm will provide around 11% of the Maryland county  government’s annual electricity, producing roughly 8.2 million  kilowatt-hours (kWh) in its first year. That’s the equivalent of  avoiding greenhouse gas emissions from burning over 620,000 gallons of  gasoline, powering more than 1,150 homes for a year, or driving 14  million fewer miles in gas cars, according to the EPA.
 
 The 7 MW system includes four large solar arrays of 15,000  ground-mounted photovoltaic panels. It’s part of a growing trend in the  US to repurpose capped landfills for renewable energy, turning dormant  properties into productive clean energy sites.
 
 Through a power purchase agreement with TotalEnergies, which owns and  operates the system, Baltimore County will lock in reduced electricity  rates for 25 years, with options to extend the contract for up to 33  years. That long-term deal protects taxpayers from future electricity  price hikes while advancing local climate goals.
 
 “Adding another large source of solar electricity to power our  County’s facilities reflects our community’s values of making smart  investments that take care of the health of our community and  environment,” said Greg Strella, the county’s chief sustainability  officer.
 
 TotalEnergies Managing Director Eric Potts called the project a  “powerful example of transforming underutilized assets into productive  resources,” pointing to the dual benefits of cutting emissions and  saving money.
 
 Baltimore County’s next landfill solar project, at Hernwood, is  expected to come online by 2028. Once that system is up and running,  renewables will supply about 55% of the county government’s electricity  use.
 
 Read more:  The Trump administration just killed the US’s largest solar project
 
 electrek.co
 |