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Silicon Ranch partners with organic livestock farm in Georgia for solar sheep grazing

By Kelly Pickerel | January 15, 2020

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A partnership between White Oak Pastures and Silicon Ranch will encourage regenerative practices on solar farms. In 2020, this partnership will bring holistic planned livestock grazing and regenerative land management practices to nearly 2,400 solar farm acres in Southwest Georgia to create carbon sinks, restore biodiversity and soil health and add to the environmental, social and economic benefits of these clean energy projects.

Globally, we produce most of our energy and food using reductive and extractive methods designed to maximize profitability. Renewable energy would seem to be a viable solution to our energy needs, but climate scientists fear the destruction already done to the atmosphere, soils, water supply, and biodiversity cannot be reversed by simply sustaining collapsed ecosystems. In addition to dire warnings about global warming, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations now estimates we have only 60 growing seasons left unless industrial agriculture evolves rapidly to protect and renew our topsoil.

When White Oak Pastures learned that its “radically traditional farming”‘ practices were sequestering more carbon than grassfed cows emit in their lifetimes, the organic farm knew the results were repeatable. Through the use of planned livestock grazing, which moves animals daily and restricts grazing to model how herds of ruminants behave in the wild, White Oak Pastures has increased organic matter in its soil from 0.5% to over 5%. That is the equivalent to approximately 919 tons of carbon dioxide taken out of the atmosphere per year.

Solar power plants are projected to occupy over 6 million acres of land globally by 2050, and the solar industry will be responsible for the stewardship of this land. In recognition of this responsibility, in 2018, Silicon Ranch established Regenerative Energy, a holistic approach to the design, construction and operation of solar farms that pairs regenerative agriculture with solar power generation and sets a new standard of excellence for the industry. Under this outcome-driven model, Silicon Ranch is partnering with White Oak Pastures and employing its flock of sheep and holistic grazing methods to manage vegetation, remove carbon and other greenhouse gases from the atmosphere and store them long-term in the soil, restore overall ecosystem function and strengthen the rural economy.

“There are no losers in this deal,” said White Oak Pastures’ owner Will Harris. “The Silicon Ranch land will remain pastoral. Our rural community gets much-needed jobs and a new non-polluting industry to be proud of. We will sequester even more soil carbon and create a record of the ecological impact for others to repeat. Consumers can participate by purchasing the pasture-raised meats that were grazed at Silicon Ranch on our website.”

One issue that remains to be solved nationwide is to minimize agricultural tillage, which releases stored soil carbon back into the atmosphere. This is not a problem at Silicon Ranch properties, where the above-ground infrastructure and solar panels, which have at least a 40-year useful life, prevent tillage and the related release of carbon stored in the soils.

“As the long-term landowner and operator of our entire portfolio, Silicon Ranch is deeply committed to our Southwest Georgia community along with the many other communities we serve,” said Reagan Farr, Silicon Ranch Co-Founder and CEO. “We’re excited about the meaningful environmental, social and economic benefits this innovative partnership will bring to the region. Silicon Ranch is delivering Regenerative Energy because it’s the right thing for the world and we’re honored to be partnering with Will Harris, who understands that what is going on beneath our feet in the soil is just as important as clean electricity generation to the health of our planet.”

“The symbiosis of regenerative agriculture and renewable energy creates a very real, and a very resilient, terrestrial carbon sink,” said Michael Baute, Silicon Ranch’s Director of Regenerative Energy. “For me, the Energy-Food-Carbon nexus is the most exciting thing happening in the climate solutions space right now.”

News item from Silicon Ranch

About The Author

Kelly Pickerel

Kelly Pickerel has over a decade of experience reporting on the U.S. solar industry and is currently editor in chief of Solar Power World.

Comments

  1. Benita Dodd says

    February 10, 2020 at 1:27 pm

    “6 million acres”? That’s double what was reported just about two weeks ago. https://www.greenbiz.com/article/what-businesses-should-know-about-evolution-rural-solar
    “A recent Wall Street Journal analysis of EIA data reported that solar projects occupied 258,000 acres in 2018, while NREL estimates that solar will occupy 3 million acres by 2030.”

    Reply
    • Kelly Pickerel says

      February 10, 2020 at 2:40 pm

      Thanks for the note. We meant to say 6 million acres by 2050. The text has been updated.

      Reply

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