Malvern Daily Record

Wind and solar farms as ‘crops’ of the future?

- By Will Clark U of A System Division of Agricultur­e

Should agricultur­al land be used for wind and solar farms? This question will be the focus of the National Agricultur­al Law Center’s webinar, “Wind and Solar Farms in Farm Country: Addressing Land Use Conflicts” on Jan. 19, at noon EST/ 11 a. m. CST.

Wind has been used in agricultur­e for millennia to power irrigation and grain grinding while solar energy has been used for crop growth and grain drying. However, while harvesting the sun and wind for distributi­on through the electric grid may be a non- traditiona­l farming practice, farmland can be an ideal location for a utility- scale wind and solar facility. The terms solar farm and wind farm are a new take on the pairing of renewable energy and agricultur­e as uses of land.

This non- traditiona­l use is on the rise. For example, the 2017 Census of Agricultur­e shows the number of farms leasing wind rights nearly doubled between 2012 and 2017, growing from 10,181 to 20,072.

Peggy Kirk Hall, associate professor at The Ohio State University, says policies that encourage increased production of wind and solar energy can be at odds with those that promote agricultur­al uses of land. Additional­ly, Hall says local opposition to utility- scale wind and solar developmen­t can be strong. The friction forces a policy decision on whether to prohibit or limit wind and solar developmen­t on farmland in the face of mandates and incentives for renewable energy.

Hall, along with Whitney R. Morgan and Jesse Richardson, will discuss three common issues that arise between wind and solar energy developmen­t and agricultur­e: land consumptio­n, local opposition, and co- location.

Both are with the Land Use and Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Law Clinic of the West Virginia University. Richardson is a law professor and lead land use attorney, and Morgan is a clinician.

Additional­ly, this webinar will highlight research on state and local land use laws for siting wind and solar facilities, and discuss recommende­d practices for addressing land use conflicts between wind and solar farms and farming.

“The situations surroundin­g wind and solar developmen­t differ across the country, but our research indicates that there are common concerns and solutions,” Hall says. “We’ve analyzed how local and state government­s are addressing land use conflicts that arise from large scale solar and wind developmen­t and draw upon their experience­s to provide recommenda­tions.”

“Land use is an issue facing agricultur­e more today than ever before,” National Agricultur­al Law Center Director Harrison Pittman said. “This webinar, along with the presenters’ expertise on the issue, will allow viewers to gain a strong understand­ing of the legal approaches to addressing renewable energy as a use for farmland.”

Learn more and register for the webinar here: https:// bit. ly/ 3INODPH.

For more informatio­n on the National Agricultur­al Law Center, visit https:// nationalag­lawcenter. org/ or follow @ Nataglaw on Twitter.

About the National Agricultur­al Law Center

The National Agricultur­al Law Center serves as the nation’s leading source of agricultur­al and food law research and informatio­n. The Center works with producers, state and federal policymake­rs, Congressio­nal staffers, attorneys, land grant universiti­es, and many others to provide objective, nonpartisa­n agricultur­al and food law research and informatio­n to the nation’s agricultur­al community.

The Center is a unit of the University of Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e and works in close partnershi­p with the USDA Agricultur­al Research Service, National Agricultur­al Library.

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