
The video highlights a growing practice where solar developers enlist sheep to maintain vegetation around large‑scale photovoltaic installations, replacing conventional mower crews. Grazing animals keep grass and weeds low, preventing shading that can cut panel output, while simultaneously delivering a lamb crop for the farmer. The arrangement offers solar owners a low‑cost, low‑maintenance vegetation control solution and gives farmers a reliable revenue stream independent of volatile meat, dairy or wool markets. Kevin Richardson of the American Solar Grazing Association explains that the model improves rural acceptance of solar projects because the land remains productive agriculture. He notes that it grants farmers access to high‑value sites in the Midwest and Northeast, where land prices are prohibitive, and serves as a low‑capital entry point for new farmers. For the renewable‑energy sector, sheep grazing merges land stewardship with cost efficiency, enhancing project economics and community goodwill. For agriculture, it diversifies income and expands usable acreage, illustrating a scalable synergy between clean energy and farming.

In a MIT Center for Real Estate podcast, Prologis Chief Energy and Sustainability Officer Susan Utaykumar outlines how the world’s largest logistics‑real‑estate firm is tackling decarbonization at scale. Prologis controls roughly 1.3 billion square feet of warehouse space across 20 countries,...

Renewable energy sources—solar, wind, hydropower, bioenergy, geothermal, and ocean—convert natural flows into electricity and heat. These technologies underpin the global energy transition by reducing carbon emissions. Adoption is accelerating as costs fall and policy support grows. The International Renewable Energy...

The February 9, 2026 episode of What the Ship highlighted five critical maritime developments. First, the United States and allied coast guards intensified sanctions enforcement, seizing a seventh shadow‑fleet tanker and detaining vessels linked to Venezuela and Iran. Second, Russia’s...

The webinar featured Professor Yuta Toyama of Waseda University presenting his joint research on nonlinear electricity pricing, specifically how consumer misperception can undermine policy goals. Using the case of Bhutan’s 2013 free‑first‑100 kWh subsidy for rural households, the study blends structural...

The video spotlights kesterite, a low‑cost mineral poised to replace perovskite in next‑generation solar panels. While silicon remains affordable and perovskite delivers high performance, both suffer from durability challenges and, in perovskite’s case, toxic lead. Kesterite promises the best of...