Farmers know all about harvesting sunlight. Every farmer uses sunlight to produce crops, stock and value-added products. But in recent decades it’s become possible to harvest sunlight in a new way.
Farmers can now convert sunlight to electricity they can use themselves or sell to others. And with the colocation of solar generation with cropland and grazing, solar-power generation is no longer an either-or proposition. Some farmers have been generating electricity with sunlight for decades. But for a growing number of farmers solar generation is a new crop that provides diversification with a welcome profit.
Stacie Peterson leads the Sustainable Energy Program at the National Center for Appropriate Technology; she has years of experience and advanced degrees in engineering. On a winter morning she spoke about help for farmers who desire information regarding solar-energy production.
“I’m the energy-program director at (the National Center for Appropriate Technology),” she said. “(The center) has a sustainable-agriculture program (Appropriate Technology Transfer for Rural Areas) and a Sustainable Energy Program.