HR-1592-119
Referred to the Subcommittee on Commodity Markets, Digital Assets, and Rural Development.
Sponsored by Mike Bost (R-IL)
What it does
This bill would prohibit the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) from providing financial assistance for solar energy projects that convert "covered farmland" — defined as prime farmland, unique farmland, and farmland of statewide or local importance. Exceptions exist for smaller projects (under 5 acres, or under 50 acres if most energy is used on-farm), and for projects approved by the local county and municipality, provided the applicant creates a farmland conservation plan and sets aside funds for eventual decommissioning and land restoration.
Who benefits
Farmers and agricultural communities concerned about the permanent loss of productive farmland. Food security advocates who prioritize preserving domestic agricultural capacity. Rural landowners and local governments that want more control over land-use decisions in their jurisdictions. Soil conservation organizations. Competing land uses such as traditional farming operations that may benefit from reduced solar development pressure on prime agricultural land. Small-scale or on-farm solar developers who fall within the bill's exceptions.
Who is hurt
Solar energy developers and companies that rely on USDA financing to fund utility-scale projects on agricultural land. Farmers who wish to lease or convert their land for solar production and depend on USDA assistance to do so. Rural electric cooperatives and communities that benefit from locally sited solar projects. Renewable energy goals at the state and federal level may be slowed if viable project sites are restricted. USDA program administrators who would bear new compliance and review burdens. Landowners in areas where local governments are unlikely to approve projects, effectively losing access to USDA-backed solar financing regardless of their preferences.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the United States loses approximately 2,000 acres of farmland to development every day, and that prime farmland — once converted — is rarely restored to full agricultural productivity. They contend that USDA financial assistance is funded by taxpayers to support agriculture, and directing those funds toward projects that permanently remove land from food production is contrary to the agency's core mission. They further argue that the bill's local-approval exception preserves community decision-making authority while the conservation plan and decommissioning requirements protect long-term soil health if conversion does occur.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that restricting USDA financing for farmland solar projects removes a critical tool for farmers to diversify income and remain economically viable, particularly as agricultural profit margins tighten. They contend that "agrivoltaic" research — growing crops beneath or alongside solar panels — shows that dual land use is feasible, meaning conversion and food production are not always mutually exclusive. They further argue that blocking federal support for rural solar development could slow the buildout of clean energy infrastructure in areas with the most available land, undermining both energy affordability and emissions reduction goals.