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USDA pulls funding for solar panels on prime farmland

Beef Central 21/08/2025
USDA pulls funding for solar panels on prime farmland

THE United States Department of Agriculture has this week announced that plans to stop putting Government funds toward building new solar panels on prime agricultural land.

In announcement this week with other Senators and Tennessee Governor Bill Lee, US secretary for agriculture Brooke Rollins announced the plan to pull the funding for the solar projects and will not allow solar panels manufactured by foreign adversaries to be used in USDA projects.

The group made the announcement saying subsidized solar farms have made it more difficult for farmers to access farmland by making it more expensive and less available and pointed out that within the last 30 years, Tennessee alone has lost over 1.2 million acres of farmland and is expected to lose 2 million acres by 2027.

“Our prime farmland should not be wasted and replaced with green new deal subsidised solar panels,” said secretary Rollins.

“It has been disheartening to see our beautiful farmland displaced by solar projects, especially in rural areas that have strong agricultural heritage. One of the largest barriers of entry for new and young farmers is access to land. Subsidized solar farms have made it more difficult for farmers to access farmland by making it more expensive and less available.

“We are no longer allowing businesses to use your taxpayer dollars to fund solar projects on prime American farmland, and we will no longer allow solar panels manufactured by foreign adversaries to be used in our USDA-funded projects.”

Tennessee Governor Bill Lee said: “Tennesseans know that our farmland is our national security, our economic future, and our children’s heritage. We were honoured to welcome Secretary Rollins to Tennessee this week, and I’m grateful for her leadership to defend America’s farmland from foreign adversaries and protect our food supply.”

The actions include:

  • For the USDA Rural Development Business and Industry (B&I) Guaranteed Loan Program wind and solar projects are not eligible.
  • For the USDA Rural Development Rural Energy for America Program Guaranteed Loan Program (REAP Guaranteed Loan Program), USDA will ensure that American farmers, ranchers and producers utilizing wind and solar energy sources will install units that are right-sized for their facilities. If project applications include ground mount solar photovoltaic systems larger than 50kW or ground mount solar photovoltaic systems that cannot document historical energy usage, they will no longer be eligible for the REAP Guaranteed Loan Program, and priority points will no longer be given for REAP grants.

Source: USDA

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Comments

  1. Erica Halliday
    22/08/2025

    Bravo, and exactly what we should be doing. At a macro-economic and food security level alone we should be utilising government zoning policy to do the same. Australia has only a very small percentage of land viable for growing food and we as a nation can't afford to have it filled with inefficient, industrial scale renewable energy zones, let alone have them subsidized by our government to fill the coffers of overseas multinationals.

    People say you can graze sheep under panels- but we are still not sure of the long-term effects of cadmium run off, or erosion between panels and most graziers I know no longer have an incentive to graze animals because they make too much money off the panels to bother.