“It’s a long-term lease, which you can still farm and basically do your whole operation underneath, maybe 80 per cent of the stock you were running, and it just gives us security,” he said.
“The farm up in North Canterbury is very dry and you know, we might even end up growing more grass underneath and we can still do our operation - it seems a bit of a win-win diversity-wise as well powering 29,000 homes and taking 13,500 cars off the road, equivalent.”
A recent Massey University study found the areas between the rows of solar panels produced nearly 40 per cent more grass than areas without periodic shading during the warmer months.
Kidner said while it was even drier around Waipara wine country, pastures should still benefit from the shade.
Diversifying farm incomes would help too, he said.
“The Massey research, well it’s obviously a bit wetter environment up there, whereas in North Canterbury it is just very, very dry. And with El Niño coming, we’re just hoping to shore up our business as well as we can really and keep the farm and the family going forward.
“It just can be a bit tough at the moment, and in the past as well, so we’re just hoping that it might even promote grass growth just by getting rid of those hot, hot days baking down on the grass all day.
“Obviously, there will be panels in the way but we could still get a drill up in between them.”
The developer is contacting the immediate neighbours and will hold an open day on the site on September 28.
It expects it could be up and running in two years, including the consenting process.
- RNZ