Solar fences

Solar fences

David Sparks Ph.D.
David Sparks Ph.D.
Raise crops or livestock and produce power at the same acreage of land. Imagine a concept and we'll call it solar fences, which are only eight inches wide, and they can be adjusted to the width of the equipment that is used on a farm or the type of livestock that is raised. And they don't get in the way of anything. Let me try to describe this verbally. You have vertical solar panels mounted on metal frameworks. They are rigid and stationary. You can set them up in such a way as to allow for the planting of crops in between. The crops are irrelevant to this discussion. So while you're growing, you are also capturing electrical energy via the solar fence. But don't most solar panels have to be slanted in such a way as to take advantage of the sun? Well, here's the owner of https://et-sun.com/About/, William Kanitz. Speaker2: They're bifacial panels. They produce power from both sides. You mean east and west? Yeah, that's right. When the sun comes up in the east first thing in the morning, the first rays are starting to produce power. That doesn't happen with any other system, not even with a tilt system on an axis. They don't usually get power to about 930. Speaker1: Likewise, when the sun sets. Speaker2: In the west, that's what they call solar noon at past, about 130. Then from then on until dusk. Speaker1: All kinds of government financial incentives to install these eti sun.
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