Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Solar Power is growing

This is a neat article I saw in the Kansas City Star. This is much bigger in scope than anything we sell but it can be taken down to a smaller level.

Solar systems powering more Calif. agribusinesses
By STEVE LAWRENCE
Associated Press Writer
Jessica Lundberg, who chairs the board of directors of the Lundberg Family Farms, is seen near a solar power panel at the farm in Richvale, Calif., Thursday, Dec. 4, 2008. The Lundberg Family Farms,which has been growing rice in the Richvale area since 1937, is among a small but growing number of California growers and processors who are turning to solar power to help them run their operations
Rich Pedroncelli
Jessica Lundberg, who chairs the board of directors of the Lundberg Family Farms, is seen near a solar power panel at the farm in Richvale, Calif., Thursday, Dec. 4, 2008. The Lundberg Family Farms,which has been growing rice in the Richvale area since 1937, is among a small but growing number of California growers and processors who are turning to solar power to help them run their operations
Rice seed runs through a separator at the Lundberg Family Farms in Richvale, Calif., Thursday, Dec. 4, 2008. The Lundberg Family Farms, which has been growing rice since 1937, is among a small but growing number of California growers and processors who are turning to solar power to help them run their operations. While it gets 10 percent to 15 percent of it's power from solar panels, installed on the farm in 2006, the Lundberg Farms also buys renewable energy credits that enables the company to say that it gets 100 percent of it's electricity from renewable sources. Rice seed is poured into a hopper that will be mixed with other ingredients to make rice cakes at the Lundberg Family Farms in Richvale, Calif., Thursday, Dec. 4, 2008. The Lundberg Family Farms, which has been growing rice since 1937, is among a small but growing number of California growers and processors who are turning to solar power to help them run their operations. While it gets 10 percent to 15 percent of it's power from solar panels, installed in 2006 , the Lundberg Farms also buys renewable energy credits that enables the company to say that it gets 100 percent of it's electricity from renewable sources. A solar power panel is seen with rice storage bins at the Lundberg Family Farms in Richvale, Calif., Thursday, Dec. 4, 2008. The Lundberg Family Farms,which has been growing rice in the Richvale area since 1937, is among a small but growing number of California growers and processors who are turning to solar power to help them run their operations Jessica Lundberg displays a variety of rice grown by the Lundberg Family Farms in Richvale, Calif., Thursday, Dec. 4, 2008. The Lundberg Family Farms,which has been growing rice in the Richvale area since 1937, is among a small but growing number of California growers and processors who are turning to solar power to help them run their operations.


For more than 70 years, California's abundance of sunshine has enabled the Lundberg family to grow rice in the Central Valley north of Sacramento.

Now the sun is helping the family churn out myriad rice products, from chips to cakes to pasta.

Lundberg Family Farms, which bills itself as the nation's largest producer of organic rice and rice products, is among a small but growing number of California growers and processors who are turning to solar power to help them run their operations.

"It made sense from an environmental point of view and a business point of view," said Jessica Lundberg, whose family has been growing rice in the Richvale area since 1937.

There's no count of how many growers have invested in solar, but Bernadette Del Chiaro, a clean energy advocate with the group Environment California, said she has seen an increase in agricultural companies installing solar panels over the last five years.

That's particularly true among wineries and packing plants that have high refrigeration and air conditioning costs.

"We're seeing a lot of wineries go solar, and it's not just to green their image," she said. "It's because they can actually save money."

More than 960 California companies have applied for rebates through the state Public Utilities Commission since Jan. 1, 2007, for installing solar panels, but there's no breakdown available on how many of those applicants are in agriculture.

Besides the rebates, companies that install solar panels can qualify for a federal tax credit on the purchase and installation costs. They also can get credits from utilities for any unused solar-generated electricity they send to the power grid.

Ron Martella said his family's walnut processing company, Grower Direct Nut Co., took a long look at the potential economic benefits before deciding to install solar panels this year.

"We're in one of the cheapest electrical districts in the state," said Martella, a director of the company in Hughson, about 80 miles south of Sacramento. "We came to the conclusion that with the tax credits and rebates, the money we'd save on electricity would be a positive thing for our company in the long run."

He expects the $3.5 million project to be paid off in about eight years.

Lundberg Farms won a Green Power Leadership Award from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency this year for its use of renewable energy.

Besides the power it obtains from its solar panels, the company buys renewable energy credits that help develop wind power. That enables Lundberg Farms to claim it gets 100 percent of its electricity from renewable sources.

The EPA said Lundberg's energy program was the "the largest U.S. renewable energy commitment by an agribusiness." The company also won the award in 2004.

Lundberg traces her family's interest in renewable energy to her grandparents' experiences farming in the Midwest during the Dust Bowl years of the 1930s.

"They had seen what happens ... if you don't take care of your resources," she said. "When they came to California and had a chance to start again, they took it really seriously."

Her father and his three brothers started the rice mill in the 1960s and began growing rice without chemicals. Now a third generation of cousins and their spouses has moved into positions at the company, which grows 17 varieties of rice on about 15,000 acres.

It turns 45 million to 60 million pounds of rice a year into more than 150 products, including varieties of rice chips, rice syrup, rice pasta, rice cakes and one- and two-pound packages of rice. It also sells rice in bulk quantities.

Company officials figure their solar panels will be providing them with electricity for the next 30 to 40 years.

Rebates and tax credits covered about half the cost of the $3.5 million project. They expect to make up for the rest of the cost in eight to 10 years.

"We're still carrying the cost of installation, paying them off," Lundberg said. "But we think it was a good business decision. It's just so satisfying to be able to contribute like that, to have something tangible we are able to do."