Agriculture and Renewable Energy Considered Together in New Publication

SOUTH ROYALTON, Vt. (September 23, 2025) — Vermont Law and Graduate School’s Genevieve Byrne, interim director of the Energy Clinic and a professor in the Institute for Energy and the Environment, has co-authored a new guide for land use, energy and agricultural planning.

“Land Use Planning at the Intersection of Agriculture and Renewable Energy” was released as part of the U.S.-German Forum Future Agriculture, led by the Aspen Institute Germany together with the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

The publication was developed by the project’s 2025 cohort — a group of agricultural producers, researchers and agribusiness representatives from the United States and Germany. Byrne participated in the project from January to August this year.

Genevieve Byrne

“Reconciling food and energy security is not just an aspiration, but an imperative. As our transatlantic report shows, agriculture and energy are deeply interconnected, and we need consistent, forward-looking policies that build resilience in both sectors,” Byrne said. “Conflicts between renewable energy expansion and agricultural production can only be solved through inclusive stakeholder engagement and evidence-based policy — something our cohort worked hard to foster. These recommendations urge leaders to think beyond political cycles and to implement durable solutions that support a more resilient future.”

The recommendations present strategies to ensure food and energy security, expand economic opportunities for farmers and develop infrastructure to support integrated agricultural and renewable energy production. They are intended for policymakers and other agriculture stakeholders at both the national and subnational levels, and also emphasize the importance of strengthening transatlantic cooperation.

The U.S.-German Forum Future Agriculture brings together farmers, researchers and agricultural stakeholders from the two countries to address pressing agricultural challenges, exchange best practices and create solutions.

This year’s cohort focused on the critical topic of land use for energy and agriculture, and participants engaged in moderated virtual sessions and study trips to Magdeburg, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany, and Boulder, Colorado.

The public is invited to attend a virtual event on Sept. 24, featuring participants from the United States and Europe discussing policy recommendations from the project around politics, research, business and praxis. Register here.

More information about the project is available here.

Members of the 2025 cohort include: Genevieve Byrne (Vermont Law and Graduate School); Angela Heinssen (Kanzlei an der Lühe); Breanna Reed (Bee-Ewe-tiful Farms); Arne Guttulsröd (AGN Neunheilingen GmbH); Benjamin Riensche (Blue Diamond Farming Company); Joel Tatum (American Farmland Trust); Jonas Trippner (DLG e.V. – German Agricultural Society); Denny Tumlirsch (Landesbauernverband Brandenburg); Sylvia Lauer (Maientalerhof); Cetta Barnhart (Seed Time Harvest Farms); Eden Vardy (The Farm Collaborative); Madhu Khanna (University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign); Sophie Charlotte Schumacher (NORIKA GmbH/ Schumacher GbR); Manuela Schneider (Domäne Hofschwicheldt & Erlebnisspeicher); Lukas Mißlbeck (Ostharzer Bodenkultur GmbH & Co. KG).

The project is supported by the Transatlantic Program of the Federal Republic of Germany, funded by the European Recovery Program (ERP) of the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action (BMWK).

###

Vermont Law and Graduate School, a private, independent institution, is home to a law school that offers ABA-accredited residential and online hybrid JD programs and a graduate school that offers master’s degrees and certificates in multiple disciplines, including programs offered by the Maverick Lloyd School for the Environment, the Center for Justice Reform and other graduate-level programs emphasizing the intersection of environmental justice, social justice and public policy. Both the law and graduate schools strongly feature experiential clinical and field work learning. For more information, visit vermontlaw.edu, LinkedIn, Facebook and Instagram.