Choice: food or solar fields

   / Choice: food or solar fields #41  
Care to elaborate? What technology would you like to un-invent if you could? Indoor plumbing? Electricity? Modern sanitation? The wheel?
Not sure I mentioned un-inventing anything. I am just making a statement. But if I could remove one thing, Tik Tok.
 
   / Choice: food or solar fields #42  
Taking the water from farmers started along time ago, when they sent it to LA.
Yes, they started sending the water to LA
They have gone a lot further than that now.
Almost no water going to south California Valley Farms below Sacramento.
Most available water is running down river to the Pacific
 
   / Choice: food or solar fields #43  
The ops post premise is incorrect for my area.

Most of the crops grown around here are not for human consumption. Corn is either for ethanol or feed. Soybeans get used for making plastics. Cotton doesn't taste very good. Peanuts are the only thing grown in large scale that gets eaten by humans as far as I know.
 
   / Choice: food or solar fields #44  
The problem isn't using farmland to build solar farms, it's that we lack the vision to see beyond centralized power distribution. All that feeds into many people's desire for something - anything - to keep change and progress from happening.
 
   / Choice: food or solar fields #45  
Saw a picture a while back of a parking lot in Australia where the parking lot had solar panels built above it and cars parked underneath. I'd say that outfit had the right idea
Thats going on all over America, too. Local dairy has their fleet of deliver trucks parked under a huge lean-to roof of solar panels
 
   / Choice: food or solar fields #46  
The problem isn't using farmland to build solar farms, it's that we lack the vision to see beyond centralized power distribution. All that feeds into many people's desire for something - anything - to keep change and progress from happening.
Fortunately for most of us it is still the farmer’s decision as to what crop one chooses to farm. Be it corn, cattle, hay, or electricity.
 
   / Choice: food or solar fields #47  
Thats going on all over America, too. Local dairy has their fleet of deliver trucks parked under a huge lean-to roof of solar panels
Better than putting a solar installation on fertile ground. I refuse to call them 'solar farms'. Nothing about them even remotely has to do with farming. They are industrial installations.
 
   / Choice: food or solar fields #48  
Yes, they started sending the water to LA
They have gone a lot further than that now.
Almost no water going to south California Valley Farms below Sacramento.
Most available water is running down river to the Pacific
Sure they started it, but they continued it thru out the decades, don't be blaming some fish for our taking all the water. Even if there was nothing getting back to the Pacific, those farmers would be in trouble.
 
   / Choice: food or solar fields #49  
Nothing about them even remotely has to do with farming. They are industrial installations.
Like server farms and cube farms, but not to be confused with farm leagues.
 
   / Choice: food or solar fields #50  
What I find interesting is the adamant feelings by most that a person should be allowed to do with their own land what they want to do, without government interference. Yet when said person (usually farmers) leases their land to solar or wind projects, the same people are outraged, and want government to stop it.

You can't have it both ways, folks.

These panels need to be on top of stuff. Industrial plants, shopping centers, office complexes, hospitals, schools, parking garages, etc. There is plenty of acreage available that way and it's a lot closer to the places of use.

The shade under them would help keep the buildings from being so hot which would help reduce cooling requirements. Plus they could be used to heat water which would also reduce power consumption.

Who goes out into all these farm field areas to shovel snow off the panels?
This is close to being reality for my area. Just over the border in NY there is a large swath of available farm land in the solar panel program. The town is pushing hard because they want the tax dollars. Broke down like this $4000 to be in the program, IF they build $800/acre/year. I also am at risk of losing a field. A 50 acre chunk of hay ground that I rent. I also live in NWPA where we are happy WHEN the sun shines. All NY is waiting is a few pen strokes. What I have heard is substations are planned and ready to go. The issue is these companies just want an easy build. Large plots of ground they can destroy and guess what large plots are utilized for.........lots of ag production. To address the farmer has a right to do what they want is correct IF they own the land. The issue is these farm (my area) only own so much and rent a large portion of their ground so they don't have control and it can severely impact their operations if the landowner of ground they rent turn it into a solar panel waste land.


The rumor is once the panels go in this becomes sheep country.
 
   / Choice: food or solar fields #51  
This is close to being reality for my area. Just over the border in NY there is a large swath of available farm land in the solar panel program. The town is pushing hard because they want the tax dollars. Broke down like this $4000 to be in the program, IF they build $800/acre/year. I also am at risk of losing a field. A 50 acre chunk of hay ground that I rent. I also live in NWPA where we are happy WHEN the sun shines. All NY is waiting is a few pen strokes. What I have heard is substations are planned and ready to go. The issue is these companies just want an easy build. Large plots of ground they can destroy and guess what large plots are utilized for.........lots of ag production. To address the farmer has a right to do what they want is correct IF they own the land. The issue is these farm (my area) only own so much and rent a large portion of their ground so they don't have control and it can severely impact their operations if the landowner of ground they rent turn it into a solar panel waste land.


The rumor is once the panels go in this becomes sheep country.
That's true. If you don't own that land, you have no control over it. That's a known factor going into the deal. Same as renting a house or apartment; you might not have a place to live next year. No one expects it, but if the owner sells it, or raises the rent higher than you can afford, you're out. Same thing with hunting and fishing lands. One owner will allow you, the next may not.

About the only thing you can do to control it is to purchase the land yourself. And, that's more often than not, very hard or fiscally impossible to do. You're at the mercy of the owner.

What I like about the planned solar project west of us is that the land owners are leasing the property to the solar company, not selling it. So they retain it in their family. After X years, the solar company has the option to pull out (literally. they have to remove the equipment if they leave), or renew for more years. So it's a 20-30 year experiment to see if it's viable or not. While the solar installation sits there, the land rests. No tillage means no wind erosion and actually soil building. No fertilizers to runoff as corn and beans did. No water usage from irrigation, so the aquifer replenishes through rainfall. No fossil fuel usage for tilling or harvesting. That's a bunch of expenses the farmer won't incur, plus the time savings. They can just sit there and collect the rent if they want, but I'd guess most farmers can't sit for long, so they'll pick up jobs and collect double income.

We'll see how it goes.
 
   / Choice: food or solar fields #52  
That's true. If you don't own that land, you have no control over it. That's a known factor going into the deal. Same as renting a house or apartment; you might not have a place to live next year. No one expects it, but if the owner sells it, or raises the rent higher than you can afford, you're out. Same thing with hunting and fishing lands. One owner will allow you, the next may not.

About the only thing you can do to control it is to purchase the land yourself. And, that's more often than not, very hard or fiscally impossible to do. You're at the mercy of the owner.

What I like about the planned solar project west of us is that the land owners are leasing the property to the solar company, not selling it. So they retain it in their family. After X years, the solar company has the option to pull out (literally. they have to remove the equipment if they leave), or renew for more years. So it's a 20-30 year experiment to see if it's viable or not. While the solar installation sits there, the land rests. No tillage means no wind erosion and actually soil building. No fertilizers to runoff as corn and beans did. No water usage from irrigation, so the aquifer replenishes through rainfall. No fossil fuel usage for tilling or harvesting. That's a bunch of expenses the farmer won't incur, plus the time savings. They can just sit there and collect the rent if they want, but I'd guess most farmers can't sit for long, so they'll pick up jobs and collect double income.

We'll see how it goes.
Not sure how to respond to that. But then I guess I would prefer to struggle day to day and provide a food source then get it from a lab where I can’t pronounce the ingredients or they aren’t listed. You also have high hopes they is no environmental damage and the land is useable after the fact.

I will agree “we’ll see how it goes “.
 
   / Choice: food or solar fields #53  
That's true. If you don't own that land, you have no control over it. That's a known factor going into the deal. Same as renting a house or apartment; you might not have a place to live next year. No one expects it, but if the owner sells it, or raises the rent higher than you can afford, you're out. Same thing with hunting and fishing lands. One owner will allow you, the next may not.

About the only thing you can do to control it is to purchase the land yourself. And, that's more often than not, very hard or fiscally impossible to do. You're at the mercy of the owner.

What I like about the planned solar project west of us is that the land owners are leasing the property to the solar company, not selling it. So they retain it in their family. After X years, the solar company has the option to pull out (literally. they have to remove the equipment if they leave), or renew for more years. So it's a 20-30 year experiment to see if it's viable or not. While the solar installation sits there, the land rests. No tillage means no wind erosion and actually soil building. No fertilizers to runoff as corn and beans did. No water usage from irrigation, so the aquifer replenishes through rainfall. No fossil fuel usage for tilling or harvesting. That's a bunch of expenses the farmer won't incur, plus the time savings. They can just sit there and collect the rent if they want, but I'd guess most farmers can't sit for long, so they'll pick up jobs and collect double income.

We'll see how it goes.
And your still saying the farmer is collecting ???????????????? How? If the land he rents is rendered unusable, how is he collecting?

Your assuming the farmer is owning the land. I made it clear in my statement that is not always true.
 
   / Choice: food or solar fields #54  
The rumor is once the panels go in this becomes sheep country.
Yet the same people who support massive solar structures also would prefer that you eat soy meat... you just can’t win.
 
   / Choice: food or solar fields #55  
Not sure how to respond to that. But then I guess I would prefer to struggle day to day and provide a food source then get it from a lab where I can’t pronounce the ingredients or they aren’t listed. You also have high hopes they is no environmental damage and the land is useable after the fact.

I will agree “we’ll see how it goes “.
Yeah, I know people that farm rented land need land to rent in the first place. But it has to be in your business plan that someone might yank the rug out from under you at any point, no fault of your own.

We had 10 acres of tillable land on the 20 that we bought back in 1989. A 4 acre field and a 10 acre field. We rented it out for 2 years. It was barely enough to cover the taxes on the land, plus I couldn't use half of my land for 8 months out of the year, as it had corn on it. So I talked with the farmer and asked him if it would put any hurt on him if I asked him not to farm it anymore? He laughed hard. He had 800 acres in the surrounding area. He just did our 10 because it was open land. He'd already bought the seed for that year, so we agreed not to plant it the next year. He was fine with that.
 
   / Choice: food or solar fields #56  
And your still saying the farmer is collecting ???????????????? How? If the land he rents is rendered unusable, how is he collecting?

Your assuming the farmer is owning the land. I made it clear in my statement that is not always true.
I was speaking of the large solar installation they are planning to our west. It is about 8 families of farmers that own all of the land that they are going to lease to the solar company. They will be collecting rent for 20 years with an option to renew for 10 more after that.
 
   / Choice: food or solar fields #57  
Yet the same people who support massive solar structures also would prefer that you eat soy meat... you just can’t win.
I doubt that. Most farmers who support these solar and wind farms on their lands are meat eaters.
 
   / Choice: food or solar fields #58  
Solar Panels are not very tasty ... might need ketchup
 
   / Choice: food or solar fields #59  
Not sure how to respond to that.
I do. I own the land here around the farm and I lease ground elsewhere and I own more ground in northern lower Michigan and none of it will ever have solar on it as long as myself or our family owns it. My leased ground is another story, don't control that but keep in mind, as fertile ground is taken pit of production and what was grown on the land no longer is grown, that all adds to the shortage of food and other processed from whatever was grown there.
 
   / Choice: food or solar fields #60  
Well, you could also say that gravel pits, strip mines, landfills, airports, roads, and parking lots, etc. all took up farm land. Probably exponentially more than solar installations ever will.
 

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