Farm the Sun with US

On March 22, 28 undergraduate students in ENVS 401 held an event showcasing their feasibility plan to develop a solar farm on U of S land.

The following excerpt is taking from the EcoFriendly Sask newsletter

Students in a University of Saskatchewan class asked themselves how they could green their university campus. Their solution? Turn a 10-acre plot on the University’s Endowment Lands into a solar farm generating enough green power for 200 homes.

Farm the Sun with US, 28 students in the School of Environment and Sustainability’s 401 class, believe their proposal for a solar farm on university land could serve a number of different purposes:

  • Incorporate agriculture by growing low-light-requiring plants underneath the solar panels 
  • Expand the University’s research program 
  • Share knowledge about establishing a solar farm with First Nations communities considering community energy projects 
  • Provide a setting to teach school classes about renewable energy 
  • Offset the University’s carbon footprint 
  • Decrease Saskatchewan’s dependency on fossil fuels 
  • Enhance the University's sustainability rating in the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education’s STARS program 
  • Produce revenue – bonus! 

The proposal doesn’t rely on government grants or university funding. Instead, the students are proposing a $20/student/year add-on to tuition fees. Their goal would be to start collecting funds, procure a site in 2019 and break ground in 2021, adding 100 KW of power every year until the farm reaches 1 MW, with an eventual goal of 2 MW.

Bullfrog Power has suggested the group submit a grant proposal for seed funding to kickstart the project.

The students plan to turn their project over to another university body as they’ve completed their course and will be moving on to other assignments.

Kudos to Farm the Sun with US for putting together such a well-thought-out proposal and for doing an excellent job presenting it. We hope that your dream soon becomes reality.

Share this story