The Official U.S. Maple Syrup Almanac 2016 2016 | Page 16

ABOVE: Tom Gadhue of Lincoln, Vt. in his dream sugarhouse, Solar Sweet Maple. Gadhue powers his entire operation through solar, and generates enough wattage to sell back power into the state power grid. RIGHT: Karl Wiles’ bank of solar panels at his sugarhouse in Central New York. 16 and $2,000 annually for the sugar house. Of course, Wiles had to pony up some of the $123,000 upfront cost for the panels and their installation. New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA) paid one-third of that cost. “If you’re doing solar for a farm, there’s no limit what NYSERDA will subsidize,” Wiles said. A federal tax credit kicked in to reimburse 20% of Wiles’ expense and a New York State tax credit provided $5,000 more. In his tax filing, Wiles writes off the depreciation on the business use of his solar equipment. State law says that a property’s tax assessment cannot increase because of the installation of solar panels. Wiles purchased insurance on the panels in case they become damaged. It costs $600 annually. Wiles funded the project from savings, since he felt the investment would provide a better return than stocks and bonds. The solar equipment is guaranteed to last 20 years. He esti- mates that within eight to nine years, it should pay for itself. “If you’re 40 years old, and you want to expand, it might be hard to come up with the money,” Wiles said. “I did this in my 50s and I wasn’t trying to expand the business.” At first, he had a little trouble with his town zoning board, since he had installed some of the panels on his house. Moving them to a farm lot solved the problem since Cedarvale is working farm. Wiles hosts tours on his 2,700tap operation. Instead of the sleek, modern panels detracting from what many view as a folksy, old-fashioned endeavor, “a lot of people actually give us a ‘Way to go,’” Wiles said. “They like the fact that we use solar.” Though solar powers the reverse osmosis equipment, the farm still uses wood for the final evaporation. “With fuel costs, the solar really helps us stay competitive with larger operations,” Wiles said. Using solar power doesn’t mean that Wiles has power when the electricity goes out, since that trips breakers on the panels to protect workers repairing the lines. Central New York receives plenty of snowfall, but Wiles purchased tower-based panels instead of roof-based panels, which make the snow slide right off once the sun warms them. Installing solar panels on a farm thickly populated by trees U.S. Maple Syrup Almanac 2016