When Steve Ault got an offer about six years ago to lease a bit of his 100-acre family farm in Prince Edward County, Virginia, for solar panels, he let the letter sit on the kitchen table for a few days.

Then he showed it to his wife, Chris. ​“Well, shoot,” she recalled telling her husband. ​“Let’s give them a call and see what they’ve got to say.”

The couple ultimately agreed to rent 20 acres of their pastureland to developer Dimension Energy for a small, 5-megawatt solar array, nestled behind a nearby railroad track and far from public view. Called a ​“shared solar farm,” it serves customers who subscribe through their utility, Dominion Energy.

As groundbreaking neared, they took some initial flak from their neighbors in this bucolic county on the edge of Amish country, about 80 miles from Richmond.

“We saw the signs going up,” Steve said, which read ​“Stop the solar grab.” But now, the couple believes, some of those same neighbors are probably envious. After all, the duo, who began raising hogs, sheep, and other livestock two decades ago as a second career, have netted tens of thousands of dollars each year on the panels, which began sending power to the grid in February 2024. The funds have enabled them to retire comfortably.