A Letter To A Billionaire Sparked A W.Va. Economic Windfall

Driving back home from a West Virginia University research and technology department session, Sen. Glenn Jeffries, D-Putnam, was inspired to write a longshot “come to West Virginia '' letter to nine global billionaire investors, including Berkshire Hathaway Chairman Warren Buffett.

Driving back home from a West Virginia University research and technology department session, Sen. Glenn Jeffries, D-Putnam, was inspired to write a longshot “come to West Virginia” letter to nine global billionaire investors, including Berkshire Hathaway Chairman Warren Buffett.

“It started out with – since pick-axes first struck coal in 1810 in Wheeling – energy has always been the lifeblood of Appalachia. Fifty-three years later, born out of the strife and blood of the Civil War, West Virginia was created,” Jeffries said. “Our state’s fortunes and challenges have always been directly linked to those energies, namely coal. We now have some technology that has to do with rare earth minerals. I asked him to come to West Virginia, come and see our mountains, it’s a beautiful place.”

Jeffries said he nearly fell to his knees when top Berkshire Hathaway executive Bill Furman gave him a call and told him Buffett had read his letter and said “get on this.” Jeffries also did just that.

“After I sent the letter, I started getting legislators involved, officials involved and we put together a team,” Jeffries said. “We started going out throughout the state looking for areas that we could have some impact in. I actually drove them all around West Virginia, and we ended up with Jackson County. When Bill looked at the site, he made the determination right then – that we can do something.”

That longshot letter culminated in a $500 million Berkshire Hathaway investment. The Fortune 500 leader will develop a 2,000 acre, first-of-its-kind renewable energy microgrid-powered industrial site where the old Century Aluminum plant employed hundreds for decades.

Precision Castparts Corporation, a Berkshire Hathaway Inc. business, will be the first company to locate on the site and will develop a state-of-the-art titanium melt facility that will use 100 percent renewable energy to manufacture titanium products for the aerospace and other industries.

Secretary of Economic Development Mitch Carmichael said the aerospace parts plant is only the first of several projected for the Jackson County site.

“There will be a cluster of industries that both supplies and off takes from the titanium manufacturer with aerospace,” Carmichael said. “We envision this as the aerospace hub for advanced manufacturing materials handling for North America.”

Carmichael said nearly 100 percent of the major corporations he’s now attempting to recruit to West Virginia want renewable energy in their potential site plan.

“People and companies, their stockholders and so forth, are imploring them to decarbonize. West Virginia has got a great heritage with our fossil fuel industry and we’re going to continue to provide energy to the world,” Carmichael said. “But we also want to be an ‘all of the above’ energy state. If you want to locate a renewable facility here, then you’re welcome.”

Ravenswood is in Sen. Amy Grady’s, R-Mason, district. She said compared to the economic growth in the Eastern Panhandle, the western side of the state is sometimes overlooked.

“I’m really excited that this company looked around the entire state of West Virginia and decided to settle on the area in Jackson County,” Grady said. “That speaks a lot about the huge companies like Nucor, and now Berkshire Hathaway coming into that small demographic right there.”

Jeffries said with all the talk of partisanship and miscommunication in state government, he simply wrote a letter, then made some calls and formed a bi-partisan team that got the job done.

“It’s by working together that we have come to where we are today,” Jeffries said. ”West Virginia is the place that people are looking for. People are looking to locate here.”

$500 Million Solar Energy Powered Aerospace Plant Coming To Jackson County

Gov. Jim Justice announced that Berkshire Hathaway Energy is investing $500 million and purchasing more than 2,000 acres of state-owned land in Ravenswood, West Virginia. They will develop a first of its kind, renewable energy microgrid powered industrial hub.

Gov. Jim Justice announced that Berkshire Hathaway Energy is investing $500 million and purchasing more than 2,000 acres of state-owned land in Ravenswood, West Virginia. They will develop a first of its kind, renewable energy microgrid powered industrial hub. The energy will come from solar power.

The first announced business on the site is the Precision Castparts Corporation, a Berkshire Hathaway incorporated business. The company will develop a facility that will use 100 percent renewable energy to manufacture titanium products for aerospace and other industries.

“This project demonstrates how investing in clean energy can revive economies that have served our country’s energy needs for decades,” said BHE Renewables President and CEO Alicia Knapp. “We are thrilled to partner with PCC and West Virginia to deliver this landmark renewable energy solution, hundreds of jobs and significant economic development.”

PCC Metals President Steve Wright added, “Our future facility is an outstanding opportunity to use clean energy as we invest in further strengthening our position as a world leader in titanium metals. Manufacturing our products with 100% renewable energy benefits PCC and our customers as we strive to minimize the impact of our operations and wisely use natural resources.”

Justice said the Ravenswood project will serve as the foundation for additional pivotal investments in West Virginia.

“This is a monumental announcement that will pay dividends for generations to come. The partnership we are forging with BHE Renewables and PCC is testament to West Virginia’s ability to compete on the world stage and recruit world-class companies like these to our state,” Justice said. “I couldn’t be more proud of the fact that West Virginia will help lead the way into a new era of renewable energy microgrid-powered manufacturing. I can never thank BHE Renewables and PCC enough for their commitment to West Virginia and for the jobs and economic ripple effects this partnership will bring.”

The announcement comes one day after the legislature passed a bill that creates a certified industrial business expansion development program to recruit and develop renewable energy industries.

The Jackson County site, former home of the Century Aluminum plant, is one of two green industrial sites included in the new law. The second site is yet to be determined.

Nearly $100 Million Coming To Develop Renewable Energy W.Va. Coalfield Industry, Jobs

The Appalachian Climate Technology (ACT Now) coalition of West Virginia is one of 21 winners of the $1 billion Build Back Better Regional Challenge.

The Appalachian Climate Technology (ACT Now) coalition of West Virginia is one of 21 winners of the $1 billion Build Back Better Regional Challenge.

Funded by the American Rescue Plan and administered by the U.S. Department of Commerce’s Economic Development Administration (EDA), the Regional Challenge is awarding approximately $62.8 million in grants to ACT Now, led by the Coalfield Development Corporation to create a hub of clean energy and green economy jobs.

The project is intended to spur job growth in 21 economically distressed and coal-impacted counties in southern West Virginia by creating a hub of clean energy and green economy jobs. The coalition will support the transition from coal to solar power and will implement sustainable reuse projects on abandoned mine sites, rejuvenate brownfield sites with new facilities, and develop entrepreneurial programs to support employment.

The ACT Now Coalition is led by Coalfield Development and includes the cities of Huntington, Charleston and Logan; Marshall and West Virginia universities; and several economic revitalization organizations and private-sector innovators. The coalition’s efforts focus on building a new economy for southern West Virginia.

More than $15 million will transform two former Huntington industrial sites into 21st century green power manufacturing centers.

The former American Car and Foundry (ACF) industrial site, which is owned by the Huntington Municipal Development Authority, and is now part of the Huntington Brownfields Innovation Zone, or H-BIZ, will receive $8.2 million to set up a new manufacturing hub. The first anchor tenant of this H-BIZ manufacturing hub will be a new Welding & Robotics Technology Training Center. Marshall University’s Robert C. Byrd Institute (RCBI) will oversee the training center in partnership with Mountwest Community and Technical College (MCTC). RCBI will utilize robotic welding technology at this new training center and integrate it into its advanced welding program.

Coalfield Development Corp., a nonprofit organization headquartered in Wayne that focuses on rebuilding the Appalachian economy from the ground up, will receive $7.5 million to partner with Solar Holler and transform the former Black Diamond factory in Huntington’s Westmoreland neighborhood into a new “Mine the Sun” solar training and logistics center.

The Solar Holler company is one of many partners involved in the major undertaking.

Solar Holler CEO Dan Conant said it all starts with training boots on the ground installers.

“There is going to be an absolute boom of renewable energy construction and building,” Conant said. “We’re going to see an amazing transition towards renewable energy over the next 10 years.”

In Charleston, the Learning, Innovation, Food, and Technology (LIFT) Center is an initiative led by the city of Charleston and the Charleston Area Alliance. In partnership with Marshall University, Coalfield Development Corporation, the regional economic development organization Advantage Valley, and private sector companies, plans are to transform the 9-acre, 110,000 sq. ft. Kanawha Manufacturing plant, located on Charleston’s East End, into the LIFT Center.

The LIFT Center will include the new Marshall Green Battery Institute which will provide research and development on electric batteries for clean vehicles, zero-emissions airplanes, and renewable energy storage; a coalfield development job training center; and a food hub run by Refresh Appalachia.

The LIFT Center will also include private investments by innovative companies, including Parthian Battery Solutions — electric battery repurposing; BETA Air — zero-emissions, electric vertical takeoff and landing airplanes (which will start using West Virginia International Yeager Airport); Dickinson Renewables — launched by West Virginia’s oldest company; and Edelen Renewables — an Appalachian innovator in solar projects.

“The ACT Now Coalition has written the playbook on how we can move West Virginia forward — and that’s together,” said Charleston Mayor Amy Shuler Goodwin. “It is through partnerships and collaborations, West Virginia can and will be at its best and most competitive. We have shown today, we can compete with anyone in the country.”

West Virginia will commit $2 million in state matching funds to this project through the Department of Economic Development.

“This grant funding will be an absolute game changer for the 21 West Virginia counties that will see the impact of these grant dollars in job creation, training, and community development,” Gov. Jim Justice said. “We’ve embraced these energy strategies in West Virginia, and we are incredibly thankful for the continued support of the EDA as we work together to continue diversifying our economy. I sincerely thank the EDA, ACT Now, and all those that made this possible.”

The ACT Now Coalition will receive an additional $30 million in match and leverage support from Bloomberg Philanthropies, the Claude Worthington Benedum Foundation, the Just Transition Foundation and other philanthropies for its economic revitalization efforts.

Solar Supporters Make Economic Case For Legalizing Third-Party Installation

Proponents of increasing renewable energy generation in the Mountain State are once again urging West Virginia lawmakers to legalize a common financing method — power purchase agreements, or PPAs. 

PPAs allow third-party developers to install solar panels on residential or business property at little cost to the property owner. The developer sells the power generated to the host — saving them money on their power bill — and the developer makes money by selling any excess power to the utility and through tax credits and incentives. 

This arrangement is one of the most popular ways to boost solar installation. It’s legal in 28 states, including many of West Virginia’s neighbors, but the practice remains illegal here. 

A report released this week by West Virginians For Energy Freedom, national solar advocacy group Solar United Neighbors and West Virginia-based consultancy firm Downstream Strategies estimates if legislation is enacted to allow third-party solar installation, at least 13 megawatts of solar power capacity could be installed across the state and create almost 400 jobs. 

The group based its estimates on results from Virginia’s ongoing PPA pilot program. 

West Virginia has about 8 MW of solar installed that supports about 340 jobs, according to data from the 2018 Solar Jobs Census. 

The report also argues PPAs would allow institutions, individuals and businesses to save money by allowing them to lock into long-term power contracts for the renewable energy generated on site at a time when, on average, nationwide electricity prices are trending upward. 

Bipartisan bills introduced last session to legalize the practice died in committee. Proponents said they intend to try again during the 2020 session. 

Democratic Dels. Barbara Evans Fleischauer and Rodney Pyles introduced House Bill 3072 on Wednesday. The bill would legalize solar PPAs. Both lawmakers represent the 51st district, in Monongalia County. 

 

Advocates Hope Large Solar Installation On Shepherd Library Inspires More Solar In W.Va.

More than 180 solar panels are now on the roof of Shepherd University’s Scarborough Library. It’s one of the largest solar panel installations in West Virginia.

The panels will generate an estimated 67,000-kilowatt hours of power a year, according to Jeff Groff, an associate professor of physics at Shepherd and the chairman of the Department of Environmental and Physical Sciences.

Groff said that amount of power is equal to about 10 percent of the library’s annual energy consumption. Or enough energy to power six and half average American homes for one year.

 

Groff said these are just estimates, though, and it will take some time to know the full impact. Monetarily, the library estimates it will save at least $120,000 over the panels’ 20-year lifetime.

 

The installation was made possible due to a $100,000 grant from a Massachusetts-based company called EBSCO Information Services. All the panels were paid for through the grant, except for one that was donated by a Shepherd alumnus. The installation took about three weeks to complete.

 

“I thought, why not try to apply for this? It seemed like there was nothing to lose,” Rachel Hally said. Getting the solar panels was Hally’s idea.

 

Credit Liz McCormick / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Rachel Hally and Jeff Groff.

Hally is the coordinator of collections at the Scarborough Library. She learned about the grant after receiving an email from the EBSCO company. This particular grant is only for libraries that want to install solar.

 

“This state has such a strong culture of coal and other extractive sources of energy, so to bring this forward and to get people excited and interested in solar, it’s a wonderful way for us to promote renewable energy within our community,” Hally said.

 

Hally and Groff worked together to write and apply for the grant. Groff said the installation won’t just save the library money, but it also creates a tool he can use in his classroom.

 

“One of the concepts I like to get across to students is just the idea about how much energy we actually consume; the vast quantities of energy we consume. So, when you have some energy production that’s local, and you can monitor it, it really drives home the point about how much energy that we are consuming,” Groff said.

 

Credit Liz McCormick / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Dan Conant is the founder and CEO of Solar Holler.

 

Solar In West Virginia

 

The solar panels on Shepherd’s library were installed by a West Virginia company called Solar Holler.

 

Founded in 2013, this company of 40 employees is one of the first solar installation companies in the state. It’s headquartered in Shepherdstown but has a larger office in Huntington.

 

Dan Conant founded the company to give people more options when it comes to their electricity.

 

“People have never had a choice in West Virginia. They’ve always been locked into one single utility that they had no say over. They have no say over what the rates are, or what they pay, and all of the sudden here along comes solar, which is giving them an option to lock in their utility bills to protect themselves from rate increases year after year,” Conant said.

 

For most people, solar doesn’t replace your normal utility bill, just helps to reduce the amount of electricity you pay for from your local electric or natural gas company.

 

Conant said while homeowners and businesses have access to a federal tax credit for 30 percent of the cost of their solar panels, nonprofits like Shepherd’s library don’t. That’s why the grant was so important.

 

On the state level, in West Virginia, there are no incentives for homeowners, businesses, or anyone to go solar.

 

Credit Liz McCormick / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Solar Holler is headquartered in Shepherdstown, W.Va. The company’s slogan is “Mine the Sun.”

But this doesn’t discourage Conant. He said despite the lack of incentives, solar is growing in West Virginia.

 

“Solar is cheaper. And so, as a result, I think the industry is going to continue to grow for the foreseeable future, as more and more folks understand that,” Conant said.

 

Conant said so far in 2019, his company has worked with 200 families in West Virginia to install solar. Since Solar Holler was founded six years ago, he said the number of their projects in West Virginia has increased every year, and Conant said many of their installations are in the southern part of the state.

 

According to the nonprofit Solar Foundation, in 2018, solar installation was up 17 percent in West Virginia. But nationwide, the state is ranked 49th in installed solar capacity.

 

Hally said she hopes their solar installation demonstrates that solar is possible in West Virginia.

 

“We’re probably not going to stay the largest nonprofit installation for long, and I think that’s a good thing,” she said. “So, I hope that it kind of has a snowball effect where people hear that we were able to do this, learn about how we did it, and then hopefully try to figure out their own path to get more installations up.”

 

Hally hopes more homeowners and businesses recognize the cost saving opportunities offered through solar, and she encourages folks to seek out their options if they want to install their own panels.

Shading Out Solar: State Policies In Ohio Valley Dim Future Of Energy Jobs

When Jennie and Brian Kahly decided to move to a 150-acre family farm in West Virginia’s Preston County, they thought a lot about what type of farmers they wanted to be.

“We went ahead and made a list of values, and one of those values was to minimize our fossil fuel use,” Jennie said. “That doesn’t mean we don’t use fossil fuels. It means we make a conscious effort to minimize them.”

Installing solar panels was high on their wish list. After two years of planning, this fall Possum Tail Farm began running on sunshine.

Credit Brittany Patterson / Ohio Valley ReSource
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Ohio Valley ReSource
Farmers Jennie and Brian Kahly found WV law made it hard to finance a solar array.

The Kahlys installed an 18-kilowatt solar array. Fifty-two panels sit atop the steel roof that adorns the farm’s storefront. Inside, they sell cuts of the certified naturally-grown beef. Two inverters convert the energy created by the panels into electricity that can be used on the farm and sent into the grid. Anything extra they produce gets credited to their power bill.

In recent years, the cost of solar systems has dropped significantly, but it can still be a costly investment. The Kahly’s got three quotes for their system, ranging from about $20,000 to almost $50,000.

Credit Brittany Patterson / Ohio Valley ReSource
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Ohio Valley ReSource
Inverters and an electric vehicle charger put solar energy to use

“We had to work out how to make it work financially and logistically,” Jennie said.

As small farmers, the Kahlys qualified for two federal programs through the U.S. Department of Agriculture: a low-interest loan from the USDA’s Farm Service Agency,and a federal grant through the agency’s Rural Energy for America Program that covered 25 percent of the cost of the panels.

Without this federal assistance, they said, installing this solar system would have been out of reach. And in West Virginia, a complete lack of solar-friendly policies or incentives further complicated the financial picture.

Across the Ohio Valley, state adoption of solar policies looks like a patchwork quilt. Experts say weak policies make it harder for residents and businesses to afford to install a solar system and make it less likely that the region will attract jobs and economic benefits associated with this fast-growing industry.

Dim View

With less solar energy on the grid, consumers in these coal-heavy states have fewer options to counter rising power costs.

“If customers are able to get their own solar, that’s a hedge against rising electricity costs,” said Jamie Van Nostrand, director of West Virginia University’s Center for Energy and Sustainable Development. “You’re going to be able to generate your own electricity and pay your utility less because you’re basically buying fewer electrons.”

According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, in 2017, coal-fired power accounted for 93 percent of West Virginia’s electricity, 79 percent of generation in Kentucky and 58 percent in Ohio.

Credit Alexandra Kanik / Ohio Valley ReSource
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Ohio Valley ReSource

As coal-fired power plants continue to shutter, rate-payers in Kentucky and West Virginia are footing the bill for decommissioning costs. Coal-heavy American Electric Power customers in West Virginia and Kentucky, in particular, have seen their power prices skyrocket. The utility’s customer base is also shrinking, which is further compounding the problem.

This week, the West Virginia Public Service Commission agreed to review a proposed 4 percent rate increase requested by Appalachian Power. The utility had asked for an almost 12 percent rate hike. This is on top of a 29 percent increase between 2014 and 2018.

Similarly, Kentucky Power customers have electricity bills that rank among the highest in the nation for an investor-owned utility, according to 2016 numbers from the EIA.

Credit Alexandra Kanik / Ohio Valley ReSource
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Ohio Valley ReSource

“There’s no question our electricity bills have gone up pretty dramatically the last three or four years because we’ve doubled down on coal in this state and the utilities have been able to purchase coal plants that were formerly owned by their merchant subsidiaries and put them in their regulated rate base,” Van Nostrand said.

He added that boosting the ability of individuals, businesses and municipalities to invest in solar could help control energy costs.

“It’s basically helping people to manage their electricity costs because our electricity costs are going up and they’re going to continue to go up,” he said.

Power Policies

There are two main policies that states can adopt that incentivize solar installation. Most states have one or both, but according to the National Renewable Energy Laboratory West Virginia and Kentucky have neither.

Credit Alexandra Kanik / Ohio Valley ReSource
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Ohio Valley ReSource

The first is called a third-party power purchase agreement, or PPA. That allows a private, third-party developer to install a solar system on your property and then sell you the power that that array produces at a fixed rate for typically 15 to 20 years.

Tax-exempt entities such as schools, churches and local governments especially benefit from PPAs, because they aren’t eligible for the 30 percent federal income tax credit. Beginning in 2020, the federal solar tax credit will begin ramping down.

“A power purchase agreement allows them to install solar with zero up-front cost, potentially lower their energy bills from day one, and it’s also a really popular way for commercial businesses to go solar on a larger scale than that business is potentially going to be able to invest in with their own capital up front,” said Autumn Long, program director of the nonprofit West Virginia Solar United Neighbors.

In West Virginia, power purchase agreements are illegal under current law. That’s something Long’s group hopes might change during this upcoming legislative session because they see it as a major barrier to bringing new business to the state.

“West Virginia has a lot of land that could be made available for this type of larger scale solar development if third-party developers were allowed to sell that power to willing buyers,” she said. “They’re out there and they represent major economic investments that we’re currently not taking advantage of.”

The second policy that can help boost solar is a Renewable Portfolio Standard, or RPS. These require electric utilities to procure a certain percentage of electricity from renewable sources, which creates a demand for renewable energy like solar. Individuals and businesses with solar panels can help utilities meet those goals and make some extra cash by selling renewable energy credits or certificates, also called RECs.

According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, 29 states, Washington, D.C., and three territories had adopted an RPS as of July, 2018. Eight additional states and one territory have set renewable energy goals.

Kentucky does not have one. West Virginia repealed its RPS in 2015 on a bipartisan vote. Opponents of the policy argued it was no longer economically in the state’s best interest.

Van Nostrand and others argue that the loss of the RPS means those who do install solar in these states are losing out.

“So you’re building solar panels in West Virginia, installing them in West Virginia, you’ve got the payments for the electricity itself, the electrons, but you’re not getting anything for the fact that those electrons are produced by renewable resource unlike Maryland, unlike Ohio, unlike Pennsylvania, unlike Virginia,” he said.

Jobs, Jobs, Jobs

Advocates for solar say the biggest thing at stake is jobs. In 2017, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projected that solar installer will be the single fastest growing job in the country over the next decade.

Already, employment data show states like Kentucky and West Virginia that don’t have pro-solar policies on their books are lagging behind their neighbors. According to the 2017 Solar Foundation solar jobs census, solar employs more than 6,500 people in Ohio. Kentucky has just under 1,300 solar installer, and in West Virginia it’s just over 300.

“I think with the right state and policy support, we can see a lot more of this development and attract a lot of jobs as a result,” said Dan Sawmiller, Ohio energy policy director for the Natural Resources Defense Council.

Credit Tre’ Sexton / Bluegrass Solar
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Bluegrass Solar
Solar panels installed at Arlie Boggs Elementary in Letcher county, KY.

He and others have been working with utility American Electric Power in Ohio to leverage a massive proposed solar project to bring not only solar installers, but hopefully, solar supply chain manufacturers.

As part of a legal settlement, AEP is shutting down much of its coal-fired power plants and is asking regulators for permission to install at least 500 MW of wind and 400 MW of solar energy projects. Ohio has an RPS, but utilities in the state have largely met their renewable energy requirements by purchasing credits or RECs produced out of state.

“We set a goal of a minimum of 400 MW in the idea that a solar project at that scale is large enough to attract supply-chain manufacturing partners,” Sawmiller said.

That includes solar panel makers, but also companies that produce power inverters and more.

Once they’re here, it becomes more competitive to develop additional solar projects in Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky.”

Having a robust renewable energy policy on a state level can also affect job growth in another way. Increasingly, companies around the world are making commitments to source some, if not all, of their electricity from renewable sources, said Long, with Solar United Neighbors.

“And it’s not just Amazon, it’s GE and GM and Procter & Gamble which is already here,” she said. “Companies from automakers to textiles to food and beverage to tech companies to banks, all of them have signed on to 100 percent renewable energy and they all demand access to solar to meet those internal goals.”

Growing Greener

Back at the farm, the Kahlys are quick to note that installing their solar system was still a good investment despite the lack of state-level incentives.

Credit Solar United Neighbors
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An analysis of state policies from Solar United Neighbors.

Brian, whose background is in computer programming, created a spreadsheet that breaks down the cost-benefit ratio. It shows that if energy prices remain steady, the system will pay for itself in about 15 years.

“If the price of energy goes up faster than that we make out sooner,” he said. “The life of the system is 25-30 years, so there’s a lot of time there yet in the future that then becomes all free energy.”

That sentiment is one Dave Fleeharty, with MTV Solar, hears a lot. The Berkeley-Springs, West Virginia, company installed the solar array at Possum Tail Farm. He said despite a lack of state-level incentives in West Virginia, they still do about half their business here.

“We’d love to see more state incentives, but the fact of the matter is we’re probably at the historical low for the cost of solar right now,” he said. “So even without any incentives we’re finding churches doing it that don’t have the tax breaks at all. It’s still a financially viable and smart investment with a very good return.”

Credit Brittany Patterson / Ohio Valley ReSource
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Ohio Valley ReSource
The Kahlys sell beef and promote solar power in their farm’s front office.

By Brian’s count, the rate of return for the farm’s investment is expected to be somewhere between 7 and 8 percent at the end of 30 years.

“You’ve got to be a really good investor to have that kind of rate of return in the stock market right now I believe,” he added.

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