Renewable Energy Drainage Services in Michigan

Drainage Infrastructure for Solar Farms and Utility-Scale Energy Projects Across the Great Lakes State

Drainage Support for Michigan’s Next Wave of Solar Construction

Michigan’s utility-scale solar buildout is picking up speed. DTE Energy and Consumers Energy have outlined more than 6,000 MW of additional solar capacity statewide, and the Clean Energy and Jobs Package – PA 233, PA 234, and PA 235 – sets the course for 50% renewable energy by 2030 and 100% clean energy by 2040. From the 347 MW Assembly Solar Project in Shiawassee County to Consumers Energy’s 250 MW Muskegon Solar that entered service in January 2026, large-scale development is changing how agricultural land is being planned, protected, and constructed.

Abraham Drainage & Excavating supports EPC contractors, solar developers, and engineering teams with drainage infrastructure tailored to Michigan utility-scale solar work. Our focus is simple: keep sites buildable, protect downstream land and existing tile, and deliver the field execution and documentation needed to stay aligned with Michigan permitting and project deadlines.

Why Drainage Failures Threaten Michigan Solar Projects

More than half of Michigan’s farmland depends on artificial subsurface drainage, and the state’s glacially deposited soils—heavy clays in the southeast, loamy to sandy profiles in the Thumb and central regions—create unpredictable perched water tables that can cripple project timelines when drainage is overlooked.

On former agricultural ground in Michigan, utility-scale solar sites frequently run into:

Existing tile systems dating back 50–100+ years, often undocumented and easily severed during pile driving or trenching operations
Glacial clay deposits with near-zero infiltration rates concentrated in southeast Michigan and parts of the Thumb
Seasonal precipitation averaging 40+ inches annually, concentrated during spring planting and fall construction windows
Lake-effect precipitation and high annual moisture loads that concentrate during critical spring and fall construction windows
PA 233 siting review requirements that evaluate drainage plans before MPSC certificates are issued for 50+ MW projects
County Drain Commissioner coordination requirements under the Michigan Drain Code when projects impact established drain systems

Drainage impact goes well beyond muddy conditions. It can result in:

Scour and erosion that weaken racking areas, roads, and other site improvements
Water collecting beneath arrays and around equipment, increasing corrosion exposure and O&M burden
Part 91 SESC compliance issues, inspection failures, or stop-work pressure from EGLE
Conflicts with neighboring landowners when water is redirected or legacy tile is disrupted
Long-term performance and maintenance costs that chip away at project economics after commissioning
Indiana Solar Drainage Services

Field-Proven Drainage Solutions for Michigan Buildouts

Abraham Drainage & Excavating builds drainage systems for Michigan sites that have to perform under changing soil conditions, active regulatory oversight, and demanding utility-scale schedules. Our work is designed to reduce field surprises, preserve site function, and give project teams confidence that drainage will not become the issue that holds everything else up.

With our team, Michigan projects gain:

Early-stage tile discovery and field verification before disturbance begins, helping teams avoid costly unknowns during pile driving, trenching, and grading
GPS-based tile mapping and closeout documentation that support MPSC submittals, landowner obligations, and project recordkeeping
Laser-guided grading for controlled slope, runoff direction, and drainage performance across large, uneven project footprints
Tile installation, tie-ins, and repairs that maintain or improve field drainage for both project areas and surrounding farmland
Erosion and stormwater control measures – from swales to sediment basins and other BMPs – built to support Part 91 SESC and NPDES expectations

Water keeps moving whether the schedule is ready or not. Your drainage plan needs to be ahead of it.

Our Services

Pre-Build Drainage Planning & Grade Control

Drainage strategy should be addressed before crews start moving dirt. We coordinate with your civil and construction teams to flag likely problem areas, shape workable grading concepts, and account for the differences between Michigan’s clay-heavy regions, sandy areas, and mixed glacial deposits.

• Earthwork and cut/fill input to reduce drainage conflicts early
• Swale and berm planning for controlled runoff across variable topography
• Permit-support preparation tied to Part 91 and local requirements
• Coordination support when county drains or drainage districts are involved

Drain Tile Installation, Repair & Trenching

We install and restore subsurface drainage that helps keep pads, roads, inverter areas, and work zones stable throughout construction and operation. Our crews are experienced in tying new work into older agricultural systems that may be incomplete, undocumented, or still serving nearby productive ground.

• Subsurface drain tile installation from 4 in. to 24 in.
• Trenching for drainage runs, conduit corridors, and combined utility alignments
• Backfill, outlet work, and connections into appropriate receiving systems
• Main line repairs, culvert tie-ins, and pipe fusion where required
• GPS-located as-builts and drainage mapping for MPSC files and landowner records

Stormwater Controls & Erosion Protection

Stormwater control on Michigan solar sites has to account for Part 91 SESC obligations, NPDES triggers, and heightened sensitivity around runoff entering the Great Lakes watershed. We install practical BMPs that help projects stay ahead of erosion, sediment movement, and inspection issues.

• Riprap placement, check dams, and geotextile stabilization
• Bioswales, vegetated conveyance channels, and flow control features
• Silt fence, wattles, and inlet protection installed to Part 91 expectations
• Retention and detention features for site runoff management
• Field documentation support for EGLE, EPA, and stormwater compliance tracking

Access Route Drainage & Road Stabilization

Reliable site access matters from first mobilization through long-term maintenance. We build drainage into road sections so construction traffic and O&M vehicles can move through Michigan’s wet springs, freeze-thaw cycles, and seasonal weather swings with fewer disruptions.

• Cross-drain and culvert placement for road crossings and low areas
• Road crown correction and slope shaping
• Roadside swales, outlets, and rock chute stabilization
• Aggregate base prep for durable all-weather access routes

Array Field & Equipment Area Drainage

Drainage around the array is not just a construction concern – it is an asset protection issue. We target the zones most likely to hold water so pads, racking areas, and supporting infrastructure stay drier and more stable in Michigan conditions.

• Drainage around inverter and transformer pads
• Aggregate trenching and underdrain work in racking areas
• Runoff management at panel drip lines and slope transitions
• Drainage integration for pollinator and agrivoltaic site layouts

Renewable Energy Drainage Company in Indiana
Why Choose Us

Why Michigan Solar Teams Bring In Abraham Drainage for their Renewable Energy Projects

Veteran-Led Execution
Our leadership was shaped in the U.S. Air Force, where preparation, accountability, and disciplined execution are not optional. That mindset carries into every project we take on. We show up ready, we communicate clearly, and we do not build shortcuts into critical site work.
Ready for Fast-Moving Build Schedules
We know utility-scale schedules leave little room for rework. Our crews and equipment are organized to plug into active construction sequencing, respond to field changes, and keep drainage scope moving without becoming a bottleneck to energization.
Straightforward Communication in the Field
Project teams get straightforward communication, timely updates, and visibility into what is happening on the ground. You should not have to chase your drainage contractor to understand status, risk, or next steps.
Regional Experience That Transfers to Michigan
Working from Ohio gives us strong access to Michigan projects across the Lower Peninsula, but familiarity matters more than mileage. We understand the state’s glacial soils, moisture patterns, county drain framework, and the practical realities of building solar sites in this region.
Documentation That Holds Up Under Review
We keep pace with Michigan’s solar and drainage requirements, including PA 233 siting expectations, Part 91 SESC obligations, NPDES compliance, and coordination under the Michigan Drain Code. That means cleaner closeout packages, better field records, and fewer surprises when documentation is needed.

Working Across Michigan’s Key Solar Build Corridors

Michigan’s utility-scale solar activity is spreading across several development corridors, and each one comes with its own drainage planning priorities:

Southeastern Michigan (Lenawee, Monroe, Washtenaw, Jackson Counties):

Slow-draining clay soils and a high likelihood of ponding make this region especially sensitive to grading and subsurface drainage decisions. Many sites also contain legacy tile from long-established farm operations, so early investigation is critical before construction starts.

The Thumb (Huron, Tuscola, Sanilac, Lapeer Counties):

Highly productive farmland, layered soils, and active utility-scale development make tile identification and protection a central issue here. DTE projects in the region, including DeMille Solar Farm in Lapeer County, highlight the need for drainage work that supports both construction and future land use commitments.

Central Michigan (Gratiot, Isabella, Clinton, Shiawassee Counties):

This region includes major projects such as the 347 MW Assembly Solar Project in Shiawassee County and DTE’s Pine River Solar in Gratiot County. Soil conditions can shift significantly across a single footprint, so drainage planning often has to adapt to multiple infiltration profiles on the same site.

Southwestern Michigan (Branch, Calhoun, Barry, Kalamazoo Counties):

Consumers Energy and DTE have active development in this corridor, including Spring Creek Solar, Sauk Solar, and Cold Creek Solar in Branch County. While some areas drain better naturally, watershed considerations and stormwater documentation remain a major part of project delivery.

Western Michigan (Muskegon County):

Consumers Energy’s 250 MW Muskegon Solar came online in January 2026. The lighter soils in this area can move water differently than clay-heavy regions, but proximity to Lake Michigan still makes runoff control and environmental compliance essential.

A Practical Look at Michigan Drainage Compliance

Michigan’s framework for utility-scale solar is one of the more formalized approaches in the Midwest. Public Act 233, effective November 29, 2024, gives the Michigan Public Service Commission authority over 50+ MW projects in jurisdictions that do not have Compatible Renewable Energy Ordinances. Drainage planning and supporting documentation can therefore become part of the broader siting and approval discussion.

Michigan solar projects should be prepared for compliance items such as:

GPS capture of existing tile systems within or immediately adjacent to the project area before disturbance
As-built tile records and drainage maps that support MPSC filings and landowner documentation
Part 91 SESC permitting for 1+ acre disturbances, along with NOC filings to EGLE when 5+ acres are affected
NPDES compliance for stormwater discharge to state waters, including BMP records and inspection protocols
County Drain Commissioner coordination where established county drains may be affected
Decommissioning language that addresses restoration of drainage function and tile integrity

We help clients meet these expectations by pairing field execution with documentation that stands up to review from EGLE, County Drain Commissioners, landowners, and MPSC stakeholders.

Michigan Renewable Energy Drainage

What to Expect From Our Process

01

Project Kickoff & Site Review

We start by reviewing the site with your project management or civil team to locate known drainage features, understand soil behavior, and identify high-priority flow paths and conflict areas. On Michigan projects, that often means digging deeper into legacy tile conditions, available records, and nearby county drain infrastructure.

02

Scope Development & Pricing

You receive a detailed proposal covering scope, pricing, materials, schedule expectations, and optional recommendations. We also outline where change-order risk may exist if field conditions – such as undocumented tile density or unexpected subsurface clay – differ materially from the initial picture.

03

Construction Delivery

Our crews carry out the work safely and to spec while staying in communication with the superintendent and other site leads. As work progresses, we document locations, conditions, and installed measures with GPS data, photographs, and inspection records that support downstream compliance needs.

04

Verification & Closeout

Before turnover, we verify drainage performance, document completed work, and align closeout materials with Part 91 requirements and landowner commitments. Final deliverables can include GPS tile maps, installation details, and inspection logs for project files, MPSC support, and future O&M use.

05

Continued Project Support

If field conditions change midstream or later phases require added controls, we can stay engaged through construction and respond quickly to evolving drainage needs.

Frequently Asked Questions: Michigan Renewable Energy Drainage

Planning a Michigan Solar Project? Let’s Talk Drainage Early.

Drainage problems can quietly jeopardize an otherwise well-designed solar project. Do not let unmanaged water create schedule delays, Part 91 exposure, or avoidable maintenance issues that follow the site into operations.

Work with a drainage contractor that approaches your project with urgency, discipline, and long-term site performance in mind.

Or Call Us now at