A north carolina town rejected the further installation of solar panels.
Nc solar panel law.
Posted on october 3 2019 by david wilson.
The first relevant date for a homeowner s association in north carolina is october 1 2007.
2 in the nation for overall solar power and the bill would allow 2 6 gigawatts of new solar over 3 1 2 years.
The statute is titled deed restrictions and other agreements prohibiting solar collectors n c g s.
Session law 2007 279 senate bill 670 an act to provide that city ordinances county ordinances and deed restrictions covenants and other similar agreements cannot prohibit or have the effect of prohibiting the installation of solar collectors not facing public access or common areas on detached single family residences.
For years north carolina has followed the national trend of promoting and encouraging green technology and cleaner and more efficient ways of producing energy.
However there is a north carolina law that specifically addresses solar panels and the extent to which they may be regulated or prohibited by restrictive covenants.
For those of us who live in a homeowner s association we may or may not have rules that either allow or prohibit installation of solar panels.
Some residents registered fears that the panels would disrupt the local ecosystem while many others worried property values.
The competitive energy solutions for north carolina law signed recently by gov.
The current state of solar laws for homeowners associations in north carolina 2019 update.
North carolina law requires all three of north carolina s largest electric utilities duke energy progress energy and dominion north carolina power to make full retail rate net metering available to customers.
Federal investment tax credit.
Legislation enacted in nc allows for cities and counties to offer low interest loans for solar panels and other energy upgrades.
Occasionally homeowners associations will ask that a solar array not be visible from a road or common area of a neighborhood.
Roy cooper positions the state for continued solar growth while saving customers money.
For homeowners associations the trend has been for state legislatures to create laws allowing installation of solar collectors regardless of what the hoa may say.
Unfortunately the statute is not a picture of clarity.
North carolina is already no.