If Iowa Says It Supports Farmers, Why Make Renewable Energy Harder?
A recent guest opinion in the Des Moines Register by Muscatine County landowner John Manjoine makes a straightforward argument, that community solar projects can provide steady income that helps keep family farms afloat.
His reasoning reflects the reality many farmers face today. Agriculture has always involved risk, but in recent years those risks have multiplied. Input costs continue to climb, crop prices swing unpredictably, and weather extremes make planning more difficult. Add in rising property taxes and equipment costs, and many farmers are operating on margins that grow thinner each season.
For some landowners, leasing a small portion of land for solar projects has become a practical way to stabilize income. The arrangement does not eliminate traditional farming. Instead, it supplements it to provide predictable revenue that can help farmers pay debts, invest in equipment, or simply hold onto land that might otherwise be sold.
That is the context behind Iowa’s proposed Local Generation Act, which would allow limited development of community solar projects across the state.
The concept is relatively modest. The bill would cap development at a level roughly equivalent to about 1,000 acres statewide, a tiny fraction of Iowa’s more than 30 million acres of farmland. Participation would be voluntary, and oversight would fall to the Iowa Utilities Commission.
Yet even proposals this small have run into resistance in some political circles. Why?
The Political Undercurrent
Energy policy in the United States has increasingly become entangled in national political narratives. Renewable energy, including wind and solar, has become a frequent target of criticism from President Donald Trump and some of his political allies.
That rhetoric often portrays renewable energy as economically harmful or unreliable, even though Iowa itself has long been a national leader in wind power and rural landowners have benefited financially from leasing land for turbines.
Solar development is beginning to follow a similar path. For farmers like Manjoine, solar leases are not about ideology. They are about risk management by diversifying income in an industry where so much remains beyond a farmer’s control.
But the broader political environment complicates that conversation.
The Renewable Program Reversal
The tension is particularly evident in the treatment of certain federal agricultural and conservation programs. In recent years, many farmers entered contracts with the federal government to participate in renewable energy or climate-related initiatives designed to reduce emissions, improve soil health, or expand clean energy use on farms.
Those programs often required farmers to make upfront investments in equipment or infrastructure, with reimbursement scheduled later through federal contracts.
When those contracts were abruptly halted or canceled as part of shifting policy priorities, some farmers were left in an uncomfortable position: having made financial commitments based on agreements that no longer existed.
The issue wasn’t necessarily the merits of the programs themselves. In many cases, critics acknowledged that the initiatives could provide environmental and economic benefits. The controversy centered on the sudden cancellation of agreements after farmers had already acted on them.
For farmers accustomed to operating in a volatile industry, policy instability can be just as damaging as weather or market swings.
A Question of Consistency
This raises a larger question for policymakers who regularly say they support rural America and family farms.
If farmers are free to choose how to use their land, why should renewable energy development be treated differently from other revenue-generating activities?
Farmers routinely lease land for grain production, livestock operations, cell towers, pipelines, and wind turbines. Each of these arrangements reflects a landowner’s attempt to balance risk, income, and stewardship.
Community solar projects represent another version of that same decision.
For some landowners, it may not make sense. For others, it might mean the difference between maintaining a multigenerational farm and selling land that has been in the family for decades.
The Real Issue: Choice
The key point in Manjoine’s column is not that every Iowa farmer should install solar panels. It is that farmers should have the option.
The Local Generation Act would not force solar development on any landowner. It simply creates a legal framework that allows small projects to exist if farmers and local communities decide they want them.
In a state that prides itself on local control, voluntary participation, and entrepreneurial agriculture, that seems consistent with Iowa’s longstanding traditions.
Iowa’s Energy Legacy
Iowa’s agricultural economy has always adapted to changing markets and technologies. From hybrid corn to ethanol to wind energy, rural communities have repeatedly found ways to integrate new opportunities into the landscape.
Solar may or may not become the next chapter in that story. But the decision about whether it belongs on Iowa farmland should probably rest with the people who know that land best – the farmers and other landowners themselves.
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