It takes a special person to farm these days. Long hours, hard work, and the uncertainties of weather and yield are nothing new to farming, but the 21st century presents new and unique challenges—and the results are increasingly dependent on factors beyond farmers’ control.
Increasingly unpredictable weather. Insect infestation. Disease. Low commodity prices. All of these can cripple farmers’ ability to maintain their livelihood. With the combination of tariffs causing plummeting commodity prices and noticeable weather shifts due to climate change, farmers across the country are struggling to make ends meet and things are only getting tougher.
A recent report in the Associated Press found that “[t]he nation’s farmers are struggling to pay back loans after years of low crop prices and a backlash from foreign buyers over President Donald Trump’s tariffs, with a key government program showing the highest default rate in at least nine years.”
According to the article, 19.4% of loans were delinquent as of January of this year, an increase of almost 3% over the previous year.
One dairy farmer told USA Today: “There’s nothing in dairy farming that makes any money right now. Just nothing.”
In other words, farmers are hurting.
Farming is the new, reliable revenue source
One thing that is—and always will be—reliable is the sun. It comes up in the morning and goes down at night. You can depend on the sun in a way that you can’t trust politicians, rain, or commodity prices. And many farmers are taking advantage of the dependability of the sun, making reliable revenue with a new “cash crop”—solar energy.
It’s a trend that’s quickly spreading–and helping farmers keep their farms while diversifying their revenue sources. One example is North Carolina, which has been a leading solar state now for several years, with strong solar policies. A 2017 report by the North Carolina Sustainable Energy Association found that solar in the state generates 30% of the income of an average farm. That same report found that the typical annual rent payments for farmland by solar companies range from $500 to $1,400 per acre in North Carolina.
… the typical annual rent payments for farmland by solar companies range from $500 to $1,400 per acre in North Carolina.
But expect solar to spread to other states and regions–with solar growth ready to take-off. Over the last several months, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Illinois, and New Mexico have introduced 100% clean energy legislation. Add to that similar clean energy friendly legislation in New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Virginia and it’s clear that solar has reached America’s heartland.
As a result, there are incentives farmers can take advantage of under these new mandates that make installing solar a financially smart decision. Incentives, combined with consistently falling prices for solar installations, means solar makes sense for farmers in more places than ever before.
What do farmers need to know?
First, solar works well when co-located on a farm, and can be built in ways that minimizes impact. Solar is quiet, uses almost no water, doesn’t pollute, and once a facility is decommissioned, the land can go back to its previous use. This makes solar a great option for farmers looking to improve soil health by fallowing land. As an added benefit, a quarter century later the land will remain undeveloped by home or commercial construction, roads, and the other pressures open land in agricultural areas face.
Second, solar facilities on farmlands can be raised to allow for grazing livestock and the planting of shade tolerant crops under or near solar panels like beans, kale, melon, squash, lettuce, peppers and broccoli.
Third, solar facilities allow farmers to create pollinator habitats which can help manage wild bee populations, significantly benefit soil and water quality, and proliferate the presence of ground-running animals like pheasants and turkeys.
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David and Loni are third-generation farmers in Montevideo, Minnesota with a 46-acre plot of available land for solar. After 40 years of working the land, they were open to exploring other sources of income and changing the use of their land.
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