| Does utility scale solar drive out native species (I am not a biologist or ecologist)? If not, tying up ag land with 20-30 year solar PPAs while preserving habitat (assuming a favorable layout of equipment) seems like a funding source. 43 million acres of US farmland is used for ethanol production, for example. It's not quite a conservation easement, but agrivoltaics might be a possible path to conserving this land versus development or factory cash crop production. Farmers get the income they need, the impact to the land is minimal (panels, racking, and wires can be stripped at anytime), etc. https://pv-magazine-usa.com/2022/03/10/solarfood-in-ethanol-... "Of the ~92 million acres of corn planted in the US each year, roughly 40 million acres (1.6% of the nation’s land) are primarily used to feed cars and raise the octane of gasoline. If this land were repurposed with solar power, it could provide around three and a half times the electricity needs of the United States, equivalent to nearly eight times the energy that would be needed to power all of the nation’s passenger vehicles were they electrified. However, if we were to transition this 40 million acres are of fuel to solar+food (agrivoltaics) – we could still meet 100% of our electricity needs, and power a nationwide fleet of electric vehicles." https://www.climatehubs.usda.gov/hubs/northeast/topic/agrivo... https://www.energy.gov/eere/solar/articles/potential-agrivol... https://www.nrel.gov/solar/market-research-analysis/agrivolt... https://www.planning.org/blog/9253223/visual-guide-to-agrivo... https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fsufs.2022.9320... https://www.nature.com/articles/s41893-019-0364-5 |
Also I wonder how the soil will evolve under solar panels, with less light hitting it. Probably better than when farmed, but worse than leaving it alone.