Take a look at the downtown of any town or city. What happens to those old buildings. They just sit there until the town condemns them and takes the property in order to clean them up if they are condemned. Same happens to old solar farms. Clean ups on you. Tried to tell that to a buddy who has some on his land. Why don't those solar developers buy land for solar farms?
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Originally posted by ajl View PostTake a look at the downtown of any town or city. What happens to those old buildings. They just sit there until the town condemns them and takes the property in order to clean them up if they are condemned. Same happens to old solar farms. Clean ups on you. Tried to tell that to a buddy who has some on his land. Why don't those solar developers buy land for solar farms?
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Originally posted by oldjim View Post
Well on a personal level I'm your neighbour and don't really care to have solar panels or windmills in the area.]
In the last year, my neighbour negotiated a natural gas generating station a mile down the road from my place. My other neighbours negotiated a 3 phase high line a half mile down the road from me. My other neighbor put up four 50,000 bushel bins a quarter mile from my property. My other neighbor decided to spray by plane the other day dive bombing over my yard.
And none of them bothered to ask me what I think.
Its always weird that the guys who rent up all the land whispering in widows ears all winter long are the same guys who don’t want anyone to do anything unconventional on their own land.
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Originally posted by Hamloc View Post
Certainly the question of the day “why don’t those solar developers buy land for solar farms”? Quoted rates by Jazz would certainly make land payments. Is it because they are almost always foreign owned companies?
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That and the difference to the balance sheet?
I don't want to start an argument.
There are many valid reasons for and against these projects.
But I don't believe they're being thought through properly. Experience learned with O&G has been tossed just because of an agenda. Nothing changes. Govts had an agenda then and now.
Would this add to my retirement income and lessen the cash flow burden to my other assets? Yes.
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Originally posted by jazz View Post
That’s a little bit hypocritical don’t you think?
In the last year, my neighbour negotiated a natural gas generating station a mile down the road from my place. My other neighbours negotiated a 3 phase high line a half mile down the road from me. My other neighbor put up four 50,000 bushel bins a quarter mile from my property. My other neighbor decided to spray by plane the other day dive bombing over my yard.
And none of them bothered to ask me what I think.
Its always weird that the guys who rent up all the land whispering in widows ears all winter long are the same guys who don’t want anyone to do anything unconventional on their own land.
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Originally posted by oldjim View Post
And the great thing about property rights is you get to do what you want with your own land, so do what you want with it.
If I install a wall of solar panels along my extreme Southern boundary, and my neighbor installs a wall of solar panels along their extreme Northern boundary completely shading out my panels, does Right to farm legislation apply? Do I have any recourse?
What if my solar panels are just the crops I grow and my neighbor puts up a wall of solar panels shading out the first 100 ft of my crop?
It appears to be the wild west right now as far as property rights and environmental protection and landowner protection goes.
Last edited by AlbertaFarmer5; Jul 26, 2024, 14:00.
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