In light of these and other variables, this chapter focuses on a few common but key issues: establishing the scope of rights and property under a site lease, easement, or government right-of-way; addressing critical title problems; and addressing water rights, statutory. In light of these and other variables, this chapter focuses on a few common but key issues: establishing the scope of rights and property under a site lease, easement, or government right-of-way; addressing critical title problems; and addressing water rights, statutory. This article was written for and published in the November/December 2024 issue of ABA's Probate & Property Magazine. Summary Landowners are increasingly approached by developers for solar energy leases, a trend bolstered by favorable government policies toward renewable energy. Solar leases involve. Less than 1-2% of farmland is needed for solar. Co-locating solar with farmland helps farmers aford to continue farming, rejuvenates over-farmed land, reduces land use competition, and provides increased tax income for rural communities. Federal government should protect private property rights to. It is important to understand the policy landscape early in your development process. State Solar Carve-Out Programs - Learn about which states have solar renewable energy certificate (SREC) markets and how they may influence your project. Solar Interconnection Standards & Policies - Systems that. Low-maintenance, high-return projects start with securing long-term project site rights under leases or easements that ensure control of the land for all necessary uses, undisturbed access, exposure to solar rays, and flexibility for project modifications based on rapidly emerging technologies or. It introduces community solar programs and their benefits, explains different ownership models, and ends with the best practices to keep in mind when starting a locally-owned community solar project.