Here comes the sun!

Published 9:54 am Thursday, February 25, 2016

Above is an aerial view of the 66-acre O2emc solar farm located off US 158 near Roduco. Once the solar farm comes on-line, the grass growth at the facility will be maintained by grazing sheep (shown below) through a deal worked out with a local livestock farmer. | Contributed Photos

Above is an aerial view of the 66-acre O2emc solar farm located off US 158 near Roduco. Once the solar farm comes on-line, the grass growth at the facility will be maintained by grazing sheep (shown below) through a deal worked out with a local livestock farmer. | Contributed Photos

RODUCO – The countdown is on for the O2emc solar farm near here to go online.

According to O2emc spokesperson Kelly Hendley, the facility, located on 66 acres of land purchased by the company from Annie Beasley, site construction is nearly complete.

“We energized last month,” Hendley said. “We are still finishing a few final touches at the farm. That includes working with Sun Raised Farms who will secure an onsite farmer as we wait for the grazing grasses to grow. As soon as the landscape is ready they will populate the farm with sheep to manage the vegetation that grows onsite.”

It was at an open house hosted by O2emc at the site last July that it was revealed that this solar farm has an agricultural twist.

The grass growth at the facility will be maintained by grazing sheep through a deal worked out with a local livestock farmer.

The grass growth at the facility will be maintained by grazing sheep through a deal worked out with a local livestock farmer.

O2emc’s business platform is they offer the solar site for use by local livestock farmers.

“We partner with Sun-Raised Farms, based in Bunn, NC, in an effort to find a farmer that lives within five miles of each of our solar farms that has livestock, primarily sheep, that they need to locate to another place to feed while their pasture is at rest,” said company CEO Joel Olsen Jr. “We build these solar farms with an agricultural use still in mind.”

Olsen said the fencing constructed around the site is “coyote proof” and corrals are integrated into that fencing in order to unload and load the sheep. A built-in system will provide water to the sheep while they are grazing on the property.

“We just don’t put up something and forget it,” Olsen continued. “We want to be a member of your community, through education and agriculture.”

While O2emc has 17 other solar farms across North Carolina (the first opening at Grandfather’s Mountain in 2011), the one in Gates County is the company’s first venture into the northeastern part of the state.

O2emc is an independent power producer who develops, owns and operates their facilities.

“We sign long-term agreements with the utility companies to sell the power,” Olsen said.

He added that the Gates County facility will be capable of generating 11 million kilowatt hours of electricity per year, which in layman’s terms is enough to power over 800 homes annually. To reference that number locally, Olsen said the one particular power line running along US 158 near the site is 14 miles in length. The Gates County solar farm will produce enough electricity to keep that line charged year-round during daylight hours.

“At night, the grid currently operated by your local electrical provider takes over, but you will not notice a thing,” Olsen said.

The Gates County project will mark the first time that O2emc will use a tracking system on their solar panels. Those panels will move with the sun…meaning they are facing east in the morning; are straight up at noon; and tilted west in the afternoon.

“We’re excited about that new system,” Olsen said, adding that the motors driving the tracking system are, of course, powered by solar energy, which allows for more rows of panels to be installed and makes better use of the acreage.

Olsen said at each project area, the company integrates technology with education with the STEM program offered by the public schools (6th grade and 8th grade science curriculums over a six-week period). After those students complete the classroom work with that program, a field trip is arranged to the solar farm site in order for them to witness how the technology works “large scale.”

Duane Davidson, the company’s CFO, told the group he took on a tour of the solar farm last year that the site would be basically “noise free.”

“Other than the hum of an (electrical) inverter or transformer, that’s all you will hear at the site, and you would have to be within 20 feet of that inverter to hear the hum,” Davidson noted. “The sheep will keep the grass trimmed as they graze.”

Like his boss, Davidson said O2emc was, “here for the long haul.”

“We purchased this land, it’s not a lease, so we own it and we will manage it in an effort to make it profitable,” he stated. “We’re also a North Carolina company and take pride in doing business in our state. We’re here for the long term and to protect the best interests of our company and Gates County.”

O2emc has developed more than 50 Megawatts of solar farms in North Carolina which generate more power than 7,000 average US homes consume, offsetting harmful emissions that would have been produced if the same amount of power were generated by burning fossil fuels. In total, O2emc has developed more than $150 million in investment.

About Cal Bryant

Cal Bryant, a 40-year veteran of the newspaper industry, serves as the Editor at Roanoke-Chowan Publications, publishers of the Roanoke-Chowan News-Herald, Gates County Index, and Front Porch Living magazine.

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