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Hello Reader,
Join us for our second webinar on potential markets for solar wool. For this webinar, we will explore the market opportunities for using U.S. wool fiber in erosion control products. Erosion control products are often required to stabilize weak soil on renewable energy sites and other large environmental projects.
Long-term, this may create an innovative and creative opportunity for growing wool on solar sites and using the wool products for erosion control and soil stabilization. Our May call explores this possibility by looking at existing research into using wool for erosion control.
ASGA Call#66: Opportunities for Solar Wool Part II - Soil Stability and Erosion Control for Renewable projects
Wednesday, May 3rd, 2023 ~ 6 - 7 PM EST
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ASGA Members: Register for the call on ASGA's network.
Not an ASGA Member? You can RSVP using our public registration link here.
Our speaker will be Rob Ament from Montana State University's Western Transportation Institute. He is pioneering domestic wool as a sustainable, natural fiber component for erosion control products free of plastic and other synthetic materials. If it works, this could open up significant new markets for domestic wool growers and sheep graziers, including solar graziers. Rob will discuss his research on the topic.
Erosion control products have a number of applications and are important for large renewable energy projects, including ground-mounted solar arrays. Erosion control measures are generally required as environmental mitigations for maintaining soil and water quality. Rolled, pelletized, and sprayed erosion control measures are commonplace in renewable energy projects for seeding vegetation and stabilizing sites.
Given the scale of future solar development proposed in the U.S., there also could be significant opportunities for wool grown by domestic sheep graziers to help meet the substantial need for soil stabilization at these sites and other large environmental engineering projects.
Rob Amentβs field research explored the development and deployment of innovative erosion control blankets and silt fences that use waste wool and other naturally decomposable components that are free of plastic or any other synthetic materials. His research demonstrates that these home-grown erosion control products offer superior, natural fiber solutions for establishing vegetation on disturbed soils. In the future, solar and grazing sheep may help to produce erosion control components, creating a potential new field of circular, solar-grown, agrivoltaic wool products.
The research and development were supported by the Montana Department of Transportation and Idaho Transportation Department in two separate projects.
Hosts: Nick Armentrout and Alyssa Andrew
About the Speakerβ
Rob Ament is the Road Ecology Program Manager at Montana State University's Western Transportation Institute. He leads a group of research ecologists and engineers to provide solutions that reduce the ecological impacts of transport infrastructure on nature, both in North America and internationally. Rob has more than 25 years of experience in plant ecology, natural resource management, wildlife conservation, and environmental policy.
πΉ April Event Recordings
If you're a member of ASGA's network, you'll have access to our growing library of past event recordings.
We had stellar lineup of speakers for our April events. They included targeted grazing and mob grazing experts from New England, a Katahdin breeder who gave us an in-depth overview of the breed, and a panel of sheep industry experts discussing the future of the lamb marketplace.
Check out the replays from our April Webinar and Teatimes:
April Call: Preparing for Utility-Scale Solar Grazing in the Northeast with Targeted & Mob Grazing Expertsβ
Teatime #1: A Deep Dive Into Katahdin Sheep and Their Adaptability for Solar Grazing
Teatime #2: The Future of the Lamb Market and Solar Grazingβ
Not an ASGA Member? Join here.β
Special Thanks to Our Sponsor for Call #66!β
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Please note that the ASGA calls are recorded and posted to our network.
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