SPRACKLEN: It's insurance. It's an income. Money will be used to either buy other land or pay my grandkids' way to school.
WELTER: Spracklen says once he signed the lease, people got to talking. Some saw the economic opportunity and a way to fight climate change at the same time. But others, like his neighbors and even his daughter in law, argue that solar panels have no place on productive farmland.
SPRACKLEN: Gal that lives across the road here, she wouldn't speak to me for a while. So I went up to her. I said, well, what's the problem? She said, well, you signed a farm up, and people followed your lead.
WELTER: Brian Ross with the Great Plains Institute has been following this trend for years. He says some oppose solar only because it's on farmland.
BRIAN ROSS: But then there's a separate issue about protecting agricultural practices as an economic base. And then the final kind of issue is really around community character. There is a kind of rural character that some people think that solar has a visual impact that changes the character of the area.
WELTER: Despite that opposition, solar developers like Bill Behling, who's with the company Innergex, are flocking to the Midwest. He's standing next to a humming inverter at the Amazon solar farm in southern Ohio. This solar installation is enormous - well over 1,000 acres with more than 600,000 panels.
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