The Alberta government has confirmed new rules for wind and solar energy projects it says are needed to protect the environment, food security and the province’s scenery.
The new regulations stem from Premier Danielle Smith’s February announcement that Alberta was going to take an “agriculture-first” approach toward renewable energy development moving forward following the government-imposed seven-month moratorium on project approvals in 2023.
Among the new regulations is a prohibition on wind projects within a specified 70,000-square-kilometre “buffer zone” that surrounds the Rocky Mountains and reaches to the western half of Calgary, according to a map published by the government Friday.
Renewable energy projects also won’t be allowed on top-grade agricultural land unless developers can prove the projects can productively co-exist with livestock and crops.
Renewable, and non-renewable, electricity projects located in other select areas — including around Cypress Hills provincial park and large pockets of southern Alberta — will need …