As solar power becomes more economically feasible, solar projects are expanding in rural areas and causing concern over loss of prime farmland. That has prompted two very different approaches.
The top spots for the solar panels will include rooftops, carports, disturbed or contaminated lands and will generally try to avoid prime farmland, the release said.
"Farmland is well suited for solar development of all kinds, for the same reasons it’s good for growing crops — it’s largely flat, drains well and gets lots of sun," the newspapers reported. "What makes these Purdue research panels different is that they haven’t taken farmland out of production — they’re built overtop of the corn itself."
According to the report, farmers could reap the dual economic benefits of leasing their land for solar use while also still having productive crop returns. However, some residents of the Corn Belt are pushing back against solar; a third of the counties in Indiana have ordinances restricting solar projects. Robert Little, a 74-year-old electrician in Palo, Iowa, said in the report that he thought agrivoltaic practices would jeopardize generational farming practices and "I don't think it could ever work."
Solar panels stand over crops in West Lafayette, Ind. (Photo by Kelly Wilkindson, Indianapolis Star) |
Another approach is "agrivoltaic," a sort of dual-use installation that allows solar panels and crops to co-exist in the same place. A story co-published by the Indianapolis Star, The Gazette of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and The Lens of New Orleans, cooperating through the Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk, an editorially independent reporting network based at the University of Missouri School of Journalism, examined how Purdue University researchers are experimenting with solar panels that stand 20 feet high.
"Farmland is well suited for solar development of all kinds, for the same reasons it’s good for growing crops — it’s largely flat, drains well and gets lots of sun," the newspapers reported. "What makes these Purdue research panels different is that they haven’t taken farmland out of production — they’re built overtop of the corn itself."
According to the report, farmers could reap the dual economic benefits of leasing their land for solar use while also still having productive crop returns. However, some residents of the Corn Belt are pushing back against solar; a third of the counties in Indiana have ordinances restricting solar projects. Robert Little, a 74-year-old electrician in Palo, Iowa, said in the report that he thought agrivoltaic practices would jeopardize generational farming practices and "I don't think it could ever work."
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