Honeybee Solar

Solar Farm Apiary

PINE GATE RENEWABLES AND OLD SOL APIARIES PARTNER TO ESTABLISH THE LARGEST
FARM APIARY IN AMERICA

Utility-scale developer Pine Gate Renewables, headquartered in Charlotte, North Carolina,
is pleased to announce that honey bees are now living on Eagle Point farm in Jackson
County, Oregon, thanks to the company’s SolarCulture initiative. SolarCulture is a Pine Gate
environmental stewardship initiative that promotes sustainable agriculture and collaborations
with the community to support research for smarter solar development.

After examining the site’s seed mix, vegetation management plan, and early growth of native
flowers and grasses, John Jacob of Old Sol Apiaries determined the site would offer safe refuge
for his 48 hives of honey bees. “In 2016/17, Oregon beekeepers reported losing nearly onethird
of all honey bee colonies statewide,” said Jacob. “The pollinator-friendly solar sites Pine
Gate Renewables is developing can play an important role in helping address the population
crisis among our managed and native pollinators.”

Data from the UK shows that pollinator-friendly solar arrays result in increased abundance of
bees and other insects, which can provide important pollination and pest management services
to crops. “Examining the Potential for Agricultural Benefits from Pollinator Habitat at Solar
Facilities in the ,” a recent peer-reviewed study published in Environmental
Science & , identified more than 16,000 acres of pollinator-dependent crops in
proximity of 204 megawatts of solar arrays throughout Oregon.

Praised by several of the nation’s most prominent entomologists, including MacArthur “Genius”
award recipient Dr. Marla Spivak and Presidential Medal of Science recipient Dr. May
Berenbaum, pollinator-friendly solar arrays are different than traditional arrays. Pollinatorfriendly
solar sites use low-growing meadows of native flowers and grasses to enrich top soils,
capture storm water, and benefit pollinators. All SolarCulture sites meet the specific criteria
established by entomologists to qualify as pollinator-friendly.

(NREL), the premier renewable and sustainable
research lab, is studying pollinator-friendly solar arrays that use low-impact design and
engineering methods, like Pine Gate’s SolarCulture sites, in order to be co-located with
agricultural functions.

The vegetation plan for the project was created by Colorado-based ecological services firm
Regenerate, a key partner in Pine Gate’s SolarCulture initiative, and depicts a solar array with
native flowering plants and native bunchgrasses throughout the site. By Spring 2019, the 41-
acre site is anticipated to provide pollinator habitat equivalent to approximately 24,800 homes
planting 6’ x 12’ pollinator gardens, and then maintaining them for 25 years.

The Center for Pollinators and at Minnesota-based nonprofit Fresh , tracks
information about pollinator-friendly solar and apiaries nationwide. “Old Sol’s apiary at Eagle
Point solar is the largest solar farm apiary in America,” said Rob Davis, who leads the Center.
An adaptive agriculture management approach is pivotal within SolarCulture, where site
conditions are continuously assessed to identify areas of native vegetation successes or failures,
and strategies altered based on those observations. “We’re thrilled to see the adaptive
management approach recommended by Regenerate, and put into practice by Lomakatsi
Restoration Project, showing benefits to pollinator habitat so quickly after beginning the
SolarCulture initiative onsite,” says Pine Gate Environmental Manager Julianne Wooten. As a
clear benefit of this approach, native flowering plants such as blow wives, common camas, and
hairy paintbrush have already attained native cover on portions of the site.

Eagle Point is the first of four Oregon sites currently incorporating Pine Gate’s SolarCulture
initiative to produce pollinator habitat but it’s only a matter of time before the other sites begin
to blossom.

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