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Holcomb |
During his time in office Holcomb worked with Doral through the governor’s office, the state’s department of commerce and the Indiana Economic Development Commission to facilitate development of renewable energy projects in Indiana.
Among Doral’s 40 some projects in 18 states is the Mammoth Solar project in Starke and Pulaski counties. It is a three-part project, Mammoth North in Starke County which is now operational, and Mammoth South (now beginning construction and Central (to be constructed in two phases) in Pulaski County. The total project will cover a footprint of 13,000 acres across Starke and Pulaski counties. However, on average, only 20 percent feature solar panels on top, and the remaining 80 percent remains green or used for vegetation.
Doral reports Mammoth South and Central will be agrivoltaics projects, incorporating heritage farming practices alongside energy generation.
Holcomb attended groundbreaking ceremonies for the Mammoth project in Starke and Pulaski counties.
At one groundbreaking, the IEDC reported Mammoth Solar Farm will make a significant contribution to the nation’s renewable energy portfolio, enabling local utilities, commerce and industry to procure power generated in the Midwest that would otherwise be generated in neighboring regions. It will provide opportunities for Midwestern companies to meet renewable targets with the lowest cost of renewable power anywhere.
In Pulaski County, the national power grid solar projects (approved and pending) will largely run along the electric transmission lines that cross through Beaver, Jefferson and Rich Grove Townships.
(Pulaski County has 231,880 acres of land in farms (2017 Census of Agriculture) which is a 7 percent increase from 2012.)
Doral Renewables, an independent power producer, specializes in greenfield development of utility scale renewable energy projects. Its 14 gigawatt (GW) pipeline includes projects such as the 1.3 GW Mammoth Solar in Indiana and the 1.2 GW Vista Sands Solar project in Wisconsin. These two projects alone will power 500,000 Midwestern households.