Solar farms are booming in the US and putting thousands of hungry sheep
to work
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[January 20, 2025] By
NADIA LATHAN
BUCKHOLTS, Texas (AP) — On rural Texas farmland, beneath hundreds of
rows of solar panels, a troop of stocky sheep rummage through pasture,
casually bumping into one another as they remain committed to a single
task: chewing grass.
The booming solar industry has found an unlikely mascot in sheep as
large-scale solar farms crop up across the U.S. and in the plain fields
of Texas. In Milam County, outside Austin, SB Energy operates the
fifth-largest solar project in the country, capable of generating 900
megawatts of power across 4,000 acres (1,618 hectares).
How do they manage all that grass? With the help of about 3,000 sheep,
which are better suited than lawnmowers to fit between small crevices
and chew away rain or shine.
The proliferation of sheep on solar farms is part of a broader trend —
solar grazing — that has exploded alongside the solar industry.
Agrivoltaics, a method using land for both solar energy production and
agriculture, is on the rise with more than 60 solar grazing projects in
the U.S., according to the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. The
American Solar Grazing Association says 27 states engage in the
practice.
“The industry tends to rely on gas-powered mowers, which kind of
contradicts the purpose of renewables,” SB Energy asset manager James
Hawkins said.

A sunny opportunity
Putting the animals to work on solar fields also provides some help to
the sheep and wool market, which has struggled in recent years. The
inventory of sheep and lamb in Texas fell to 655,000 in January 2024, a
4% drop from the previous year, according to the most recent figures
from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Because solar fields use sunny, flat land that is often ideal for
livestock grazing, the power plants have been used in coordination with
farmers rather than against them.
Sheepherder JR Howard accidentally found himself in the middle of Texas’
burgeoning clean energy transition. In 2021, he and his family began
contracting with solar farms — sites with hundreds of thousands of solar
modules — to use his sheep to eat the grass.
What was once a small business has turned into a full-scale operation
with more than 8,000 sheep and 26 employees.
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Sheep graze on a solar farm owned by SB Energy on Tuesday, Dec. 17,
2024, in Buckholts, Texas. (AP Photo/Ashley Landis)
 “Just the growth has been kind of
crazy for us,” said Howard, who named his company Texas Solar Sheep.
“It’s been great for me and my family.”
Following the herd
Some agriculture experts say Howard's success reflects how solar
farms have become a boon for some ranchers.
Reid Redden, a sheep farmer and solar vegetation manager in San
Angelo, Texas, said a successful sheep business requires
agricultural land that has become increasingly scarce.
“Solar grazing is probably the biggest opportunity that the sheep
industry had in the United States in several generations,” Redden
said.
The response to solar grazing has been overwhelmingly positive in
rural communities near South Texas solar farms where Redden raises
sheep for sites to use, he said.
“I think it softens the blow of the big shock and awe of a big solar
farm coming in,” Redden said.
Fielding more research
Agrivoltaics itself isn't new. Solar farms are land-intensive and
require a lot of space that could be used for food production.
Agrivoltaics compensates by allowing the two to coexist, whether
growing food or caring for livestock.
There is a lot still unknown about the full effects of solar
grazing, said Nuria Gomez-Casanovas, an assistant professor in
regenerative system ecology at Texas A&M University.
Not enough studies have been done to know the long-term
environmental impacts, such as how viable the soil will be for
future agriculture, although Gomez-Casanovas suspects solar grazing
may improve sheep productivity because the panels provide shade and
can be more cost-efficient than mowing.
“We really have more questions than answers,” Gomez-Casanovas said.
“There are studies that show that the land productivity is not
higher versus solar alone or agriculture alone, so it's
context-dependent.”
As one of Texas' largest solar sheep operators, Howard has more
clients than he can handle. He expects to add about 20 more
employees by the end of this year, which would nearly double his
current workforce. As for the sheep, he has enough already.
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