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Pairing sheep with solar sites

AGRICULTURE: Local sites pitched for grazing as well as generating power.



While a political battle rages in New York state on green energy deadlines put forth by Gov. Andrew Cuomo, local groups have put up steady opposition to renewable energy projects, such as solar farms or wind turbines, in their towns and in their fields. Of all the beliefs that glue these individuals together, the loss of rural agriculture land high on the list.


Put simply: farmland should make food, not electricity.


But to this point, Caleb Scott, owner of Scott Land Yard Group and a founding member, as well as vice president of American Solar Grazing Association, has a proposition.


“The assumption is when you put solar up, you lose that agricultural land, and you don’t,” Scott said. “We can make that land more productive.”


Scott said that because of solar, the land can be made to produce even more than it does now in terms of food production and calories grown on the spot.


“When I was younger, we had the dairy farm,” Scott said. “But once I got older, I got into sheep farming and from there we saw the opportunity to expand our business using solar. We started grazing our sheep on solar.”


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