et-sun©

 NEWS

N E W

The first movable vertical SolarFence System

has 3 bifacial Solar Panels, total of 1515 Watts.

Long-lasting and durable galvanized steel frame and parts

are easy to set up and to move where it's needed. 

December 2022

45 HP & 55 HP e-Tractor recommendation

                                         click Description & Pricing

 

gallery/description and pricing.pdf
 
COMING Soon

 

Besides our stationary SolarFence Systems© as shown throughout our website

and our new movable (by hand) DIY SolarFence System©

we soon will offer

        a portable SolarFence System© mounted on a trailer

to carry them to places where they are needed temporarily.

 

 

Our new SolarFence© System at the Sarasota County Fair March 18 - 27, 2022

amazed and excited visitors from almost all States in the USA and other Countries

Farmers, Home and Business Owners, Church Leaders, Solar Installers recognized immediately the benefits of our SolarFence© System.

 

February 7, 2023

Shedding new light on Agrivoltaics

By Tamara Scully for Country Folks

Solar energy arrays on farmland no longer means that the land will be taken out of production as large ground-mounted panels take up valuable farmland, disturb soils… read the article here:

https://countryfolks.com/shedding-new-light-on-agrivoltaics/

Country Folks is a weekly publication serving the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic agriculture industries. The coverage area reaches from Maine to North Carolina with four regional editions. The key market focuses include dairy, beef, crops, small ruminants, etc. Editorial content revolves around production, animal health, industry events, trade shows, auctions, etc.

 

November 12. 2021

CleanTechnica is the world’s #1 source for cleantech news and analysis. It entertains and informs approximately 6 million monthly global readers along with hundreds of thousands of social media followers. It is followed by some of the biggest names in the cleantech world on Twitter, where it enjoys tens of millions of monthly impressions.

one more places solar can go: Fences

by Jennifer Sensiba