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Solar permitting — Dukes County, Massachusetts

FIPS 25007

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Dukes County, MA
Risk score 45/100 · Full scorecard →
Compliance: ModerateTrajectory: StableSaturation: Moderate

Martha's Vineyard; island; special environmental sensitivity; very limited utility-scale land; ferry/tourism i. Permitting: Municipal Planning Board: Special Permit or variance. Track record: no prior utility-scale solar on record —

Key driver: Martha's Vineyard; island; special environmental sensitivity; very limited utility-scale land; ferry/tourism identity; EFSB >25 MW; local governs ≤25 MW — island character dominant

Permitting process

Local permitting pathway

Municipal Planning Board: Special Permit or variance (≤25 MW). EFSB master permit for >25 MW.

Setbacks & buffers

None codified at county level. Municipal bylaws govern ≤25 MW; EFSB review for >25 MW.

Spacing requirements

None codified.

Size restrictions

None codified; managed via CUP/SUP conditions

Penalties & bonding

No penalties or adjustments. Standard CUP/SUP process.

State-level permits & approvals

2024 Massachusetts Climate Act (signed Nov 21, 2024): historic reform of siting and permitting. Large projects (>25 MW generation or >100 MWh storage): Energy Facilities Siting Board (EFSB) consolidates state and local review into single master permit; 15-month deadline for EFSB decision. Small projects (≤25 MW / ≤100 MWh): municipalities retain permitting authority under new streamlined process (225 CMR 29.00 promulgated Feb 27, 2026; effective immediately). 12-month deadline for municipal decisions on small clean energy projects. MGL Ch.40A §3 (Massachusetts Zoning Act): zoning ordinances cannot prohibit or unreasonably regulate solar energy systems — long-standing solar protection for sub-threshold projects. DOER site suitability scoring framework; community benefit plan requirements for larger projects. ISO-NE interconnection required statewide.

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State policy & grid context

State RPS & clean energy policy

40% by 2030 + 80% Clean Peak / net-zero by 2050 | Act Creating Next-Gen Roadmap for MA Climate Policy (2021) | G.L. c.25A §11F

State incentive programs

MA SMART Program (Solar Massachusetts Renewable Target): production incentive paid per kWh generated for 10 years for projects ≤5 MW; administered by DOER/utilities. Adder rates for low-income housing, brownfields, rooftops, and agrivoltaic projects. Net metering: available statewide (up to 5 MW for behind-the-meter); MA expanded net metering cap via DPU. MA RPS: 40% renewable by 2030 (Class I); Class I solar carve-out drives SREC value. MA Clean Energy Center MassSave: rebates for commercial/industrial efficiency and solar. Utility: Eversource (NSTAR/WMECo) and National Grid serve most counties; Cape Light Compact serves Barnstable and Dukes; various municipal aggregations active.

Grid & interconnection

ISO-NE / Southeast Massachusetts (SEMA) zone — Eversource / Unitil

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Full state policy & grid detail

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Community opposition P1

No organized opposition on record for this county yet — no petition, group, or oppositional coverage tracked. Absence of opposition is a positive siting signal.

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Energy-related meetings & dockets P1

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State PSC dockets P1

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Sentiment rollup P2

No sentiment rollup yet (requires meeting transcripts to be processed).

Local news P3

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Data sources: public agendas/minutes from local government sites; PSC dockets from state regulators; news from GDELT and curated RSS; sentiment derived from public meeting transcripts. Last refreshed 2026-07-08. See the county risk scorecard or the full Massachusetts permitting index.