Posts Tagged ‘landowners’

The Wind Industry Changes Speeds

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

A few years ago it seemed as if mammoth wind turbines were growing more rapidly across the Midwest than corn and soybeans.  It was hard to drive any distance without seeing a new “wind-farm” springing up, or at the very least see a semi on the interstate hauling one of the massive blades to its new destination.  However, a recent article in the Des Moines Register (Wind Industry Slumps Nationally) discusses the slowdown that the wind energy industry is currently experiencing.  According to the article, the amount of megawatts added decreased 71% form this time last year.

How does this affect farmland owners?  Well, for every one of those turbines that rises up out of the cornfield, the landowner receives an annual payment from the energy company for the leasing of his/her property where the turbine sits.  Leases vary from company to company (and site to site), but the landowner will normally make much more off leasing a few acres to the energy company than he/she would for the crop the turbine is replacing.  So a decline in activity out of the wind companies trickles down in less production and fewer leases available to landowners.

As our nation, and the world, continues to seek out alternative energy sources it will be interesting to see what role wind energy plays.  Will the industry pick up steam again, or is the lull that they are experiencing going to set in for the foreseeable future?  Definitely something to watch.

The Appeal and Challenges of Irrigated Farmland

Thursday, June 24th, 2010

Recently, I’ve had the opportunity to work with several investors who were looking at purchasing an irrigated farm in the Midwest.  The attraction was multi-faceted… A.  The tax benefits of depreciating the equipment; B. Lower real estate taxes stemming from the less productive soils; C. Increased rents and yields; D. The opportunity to grow specialty crops; and E. The abundance of cheap available water.  In addition to these benefits, irrigated land has also been appreciating at a rate that matches, if not exceeds, dryland tracts as reported here… Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis newsletter. 

These benefits are appealing to many farmers and investors, even though most areas of the Midwest have productive soils and enough rainfall to produce good crops without any added water.  All that said, in other parts of the country, “water wars” are breaking out.  In the western plain states, there’s a fight brewing between landowners in Nebraska and landowners in Kansas over the amount of water that can be pumped.  A recent article in the Omaha World Herald (Work Continues on Water Compliance) outlines the problems that landowners face when too much water is taken for irrigation use, thus deplenishing the aquifer that the units source.  And worse yet is the tug-of-war in California where agriculture must fight the urban demand for water on a daily basis both in the courtroom and in the field (Water Managers Weigh Implications of Order).

So will irrigation become more popular throughout the Corn Belt?  I think it can but farmers and investors need to learn from their western cousins and be prepared for the fresh water fights that may be on the horizon, especially near large cities (think Chicago) where clean water is becoming more scarce.  And don’t be surprised when governmental authorities from the local county health department to the Environmental Protection Agency or the Army Corp of Engineers try to take control of this resource.  In many parts of the world, water is a more precious commodity than oil. Fortunately, this hasn’t been the norm in the Midwest and with wise use and foresight, it hopefully never will be.

THE INCREASING TREND OF ABSENTEE LANDLORDS

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

Of those of you out there who cash rent land, do your landlords live in the area or do they live out of the county or even the state?  A recent article in The Progress Report takes a look at studies done by Iowa State economists on cash rent payments in Iowa and where those payments are ending up.  (Read the article, The Flow of Money From Rented Land in Iowa) Are the rent payments going to the landowner who lives across from the farm or to the one who lives halfway across the country?

What they found is that nearly a quarter of Iowa landowners who are receiving cash rent live outside the state of Iowa.  In some of the more fertile counties, such as Kossuth Co., this meant that roughly $13 million dollars left the county last year in the form of cash rent payments.  Is this a bad thing?  Not necessarily.  As society has trended towards more urban living over the last 50-60 years, it only makes sense that there are going to be less and less farmland owners that live in the area as farms are handed down through the generations.

What is important is that tenants and landlords stay in communication, whether they live 2 miles from each other or 2,000 miles.  As with anything, an open channel of communication will make doing business much easier.

I will go back to the question I initially asked.  How many of you farmers have landlords that live in another state?  What is your relationship like with them?  How about landowners that are reading this.  Do you own ground in a state other than which you live in?  Are you happy with the level of communication that you have with your tenant?  Let us know at eric@loranda.com.