Oregon Capital
Chronicle
By
Alex Baumhardt
August 10, 2023
Proposal for Oregon’s first
large-scale solar park and farm meets opposition
The Muddy Creek Energy Park would be the first solar
facility in Linn County and be built on valuable farmland
In solar grazing farms, sheep and other livestock
are able to eat weeds, grasses and plants on the same land that’s used
to host solar panels for clean energy generation. (Oregon State
University)
A first-of-its
kind proposal for a solar park and sheep ranch near Brownsville in the
Willamette Valley is drawing both enthusiasm and ire from area
residents and farmers.
If the Muddy
Creek Solar Facility is approved, it could provide emissions-free
electricity to more than 30,000 homes while allowing land zoned for
agriculture to be used for sheep grazing and growing native plants,
according to project leaders. But those opposed say the project takes
valuable farmland out of production, and could potentially drive up
surrounding land prices.
Muddy Creek
would be the state’s first large-scale commercial “agrovoltaic” or
“solar grazing” project — meaning it is both producing solar energy
for electricity and being used for agricultural purposes.
About 100
people tried to disrupt the first public meeting over the project in
Brownsville July 25, according to a report in
the Bend Bulletin. At the meeting, hosted by the Oregon Energy
Facility Siting Council, area farmers took issue with using 1,600
acres of land zoned for agriculture to generate electricity.
“What happened
to exclusive farm use?” retired farmer Don Bowers, of Harrisburg, said at
the meeting. “We shouldn’t even be here.”
The proposed
site of Muddy Creek is privately owned farmland covered in
non-irrigated ryegrass. It would be leased for 40 years to Qcells, the
U.S. subsidiary of South Korean solar company Hanwha Q. The lease
information is not publicly available.
The seven,
governor-appointed members of the facility siting council will decide
whether to approve the project over the next year. The council is
responsible for approving and overseeing all large electricity
generating facilities and will take
public comments on
Muddy Creek until Friday.
If approved,
Qcells hopes to start construction in late 2024 and to have Muddy
Creek operational by late 2026.
Challenges
Though Qcells
has advertised the solar park as a dual-use solar facility and sheep
ranch, the Oregon Department of Energy said the agricultural intent
was not included in the company’s initial paperwork. Jenny Kalez, an
energy department spokesperson, said via email that the first time the
agency found out the proposed facility would be used for both solar
production and agriculture was at the public meeting in Brownsville.
She confirmed it would be the first commercial solar grazing facility
in Oregon if approved.
“Among other
proposed, approved, and operating state-jurisdiction solar facilities,
none have an agricultural element,” Kalez said.
In an email,
Brian Tran, development manager for Qcells said the project would
provide Linn County residents with clean, domestic energy on land that
would continue to be preserved for agriculture.
“Linn County
imports almost all its energy, making it dependent on outside sources
of power. We chose this area because it has excellent access to
existing energy infrastructure and the right terrain for solar panels
and ranching,” Tran said.
The site
proposed for Muddy Creek intersects with a PacifiCorp transmission
line, which would allow the electricity generated from the panels to
be sent to an existing substation nearby. That substation could reduce
the voltage to levels that are safe to distribute to customers. Tran
said there’s no need to build new transmission lines or substations,
and the panels would be mounted on steel pipes rather than concrete
pads, allowing more land to be reserved for grazing and farming.
“This project
allows the ability to not only keep this site in agricultural
production, but also, return the land to the landowners at the
completion of the project lease,” Tran said. “Our research shows that
soil health increases following the decommissioning of a properly
designed solar project. It also gives families a chance to plan for
the use of their land in the long term, while also keeping legacy
farms intact.”
Jim Johnson,
land-use and water-planning coordinator at the Oregon Department of
Agriculture, testified at the Brownsville meeting that the soil where
the solar farm would be placed is of high agricultural value that is
rare in Oregon. He also testified that solar-grazing projects in other
parts of the country have generated speculative land values
surrounding them that many farmers cannot compete with.
“There’s no
new farmland to buy, so how do you farm? You rent or lease land,”
Johnson said of the Willamette Valley. “A farmer cannot compete with
an energy company in terms of how much they pay to rent or lease the
land.”
Several
attendees at the July meeting in Brownville expressed concern that a
foreign-owned company would be overseeing the solar farm. Hanwha Q is
headquartered in South Korea, but its subsidiary Qcells is based in
Irvine, California. Of the 16 solar facilities either proposed, under
review or approved in Oregon, seven are owned by subsidiaries of
foreign companies. Qcells also has its own manufacturing facility in
Georgia, so all of the panels would be made in the U.S., Tran told the
audience in Brownsville.
Farm power
The
agriculture industry occupies more than 40% of all surface land in the
lower 48 states, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. If
the U.S. is to transition to at least 40% of electricity being
produced by solar by 2035, agricultural land would need to host solar
panels, according to the U.S. Department of Energy’s 2021 Solar
Futures Study.
Dual solar
parks and farms are growing fastest in the Northeast, where some
states have invested in research and offered tax incentives for
projects.
Oregon State
University piloted last year an agrovoltaics project to research the
combination of solar energy generation and the farming of different
crops. The North Willamette Research and Extension Center will become
the first energy/farm research study area of its kind in the world,
according to the university.
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