The Future of Solar Photovoltaics

Doug Krause on Cattle Solar & Cable-Mounted PV

1 h 8 min · 10. juli 2026
episode Doug Krause on Cattle Solar & Cable-Mounted PV cover

Description

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2272772/fan_mail/new] Vikram interviews Doug Krause, president and founder of RUTE SunTracker, for a wide-ranging conversation on the future of utility-scale solar. Doug traces his path from commercial fishing in Alaska and tensile-membrane cable work across Europe to mechanical engineering and solar project finance, and explains how that mix led to RUTE's patented cable-based mounting system, the same structural principle used in suspension bridges and ship rigging, applied to PV. They dig into "cattle solar": elevated panels four metres above pasture that give ranchers free shade, cooler cows, more grass and retained water, while the operator gains bifacial yield and lower land and vegetation-management costs. The discussion ranges across LCOE and why Doug believes cattle solar can be the cheapest way to build, the UK "developer bloodbath" and spam grid applications, cable-factory and high-voltage connection bottlenecks, Texas and ERCOT, GIS and how little land solar actually needs, and how RUTE's "fields" and "blooms" turn EPC crews into riggers with no pile-driving or trenching. Chapters: 0:00 Welcome and why this podcast exists 1:15 Doug's path: Indiana, Alaska fishing, mechanical engineering 5:04 Getting into solar and learning project finance 7:40 The 2011 pizza-box prototype and the case for cables 10:30 What "cables" really means: structural cables vs wires 12:13 Grants, pilots and proving it works in high wind 13:27 Cattle solar: free shade ranchers actually want 15:33 The clipper-ship analogy for wind loads 17:02 From utility-scale engineering to commercialising 20:39 Pairing ranchers with developers 21:26 The first commercial project: 120 kW in Oregon 22:23 Going coast to coast: the Georgia hurricane-zone build 30:38 The cost case: why cattle solar wins on LCOE 31:33 UK development costs and the developer bloodbath 36:06 Cable-factory and grid-connection bottlenecks 40:44 Texas and ERCOT: building transmission overnight 45:47 GIS and how little land solar really needs 48:44 Inside RUTE: fields, blooms and EPCs as riggers 51:34 Bankability, bootstrapping and route to market 1:01:14 The future: data centres, agrivoltaics and cattle solar 1:06:46 What's next: regional demonstration projects 1:07:12 Closing thoughts

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22 episodes

episode William Fraser on Habitat, Biodiversity and the UK's Largest Solar Farm artwork

William Fraser on Habitat, Biodiversity and the UK's Largest Solar Farm

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2272772/fan_mail/new] Will Fraser on Habitat, Biodiversity and the UK's Largest Solar Farm The Future of Solar Photovoltaics podcast heads to Tower 42 for a super series on the Heathcote Holdings Group and the people driving solar forward in the UK. In this episode, Vikram Kumar talks to Will Fraser, who runs Habitat Regeneration, the ecological and land management arm of the group, about what actually happens to the land under and around a giant solar farm. Drawing on his first project in solar, the UK's largest ever solar farm at Cleve Hill, Will explains how habitat and ecology work isn't an afterthought but a 25 to 30 year commitment written into planning from day one. We get into biodiversity net gain and how solar routinely beats the mandatory targets, why wildflowers need the right soil conditions, how drones and AI are being used to monitor 1,600 plant species year on year, the translocation of protected water voles, sheep grazing as genuine food production, wildfire and live-equipment risk, nutrient neutrality and the sea defences at Cleve Hill. It's an honest look at the food-versus-energy debate, the just transition, and whether solar really can restore the countryside rather than pave it over. Guest: Will Fraser, Habitat Regeneration (FGS Agri, Heathcote Holdings Group) Host: Vikram Kumar Chapters: 00:00 Intro and welcome to Tower 42 00:42 Meet Will Fraser and Habitat Regeneration 01:20 Farming roots, becoming a surveyor, and spotting the BNG opportunity 03:45 A background in land, countryside and rural diversification 04:34 Where Habitat Regeneration sits within FGS Agri 05:06 What is a LEMP? 06:07 Getting ecology right early, and introducing Cleve Hill 09:00 Food versus energy, site selection and public acceptance 10:57 Is solar really controversial? Oil spills and a just transition 11:48 When Will gets involved: turnkey habitat, mitigation and O&M 14:11 Water voles: protecting a rare species during construction 15:14 AgriPV and east-west layouts: farming under the panels 16:49 Sheep grazing, wildfire risk and live equipment 17:36 Wildflowers, drawing down soil nutrients, drones and AI monitoring 20:12 Biodiversity net gain, the Defra Metric and bees 23:14 Water quality, nutrient neutrality and the Cleve Hill sea defences 25:07 Keeping it alive: the crucial first three years 25:48 What Will loves about the job 26:36 The future of solar photovoltaics 28:28 Closing thoughts and thanks

Yesterday29 min
episode Doug Krause on Cattle Solar & Cable-Mounted PV artwork

Doug Krause on Cattle Solar & Cable-Mounted PV

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2272772/fan_mail/new] Vikram interviews Doug Krause, president and founder of RUTE SunTracker, for a wide-ranging conversation on the future of utility-scale solar. Doug traces his path from commercial fishing in Alaska and tensile-membrane cable work across Europe to mechanical engineering and solar project finance, and explains how that mix led to RUTE's patented cable-based mounting system, the same structural principle used in suspension bridges and ship rigging, applied to PV. They dig into "cattle solar": elevated panels four metres above pasture that give ranchers free shade, cooler cows, more grass and retained water, while the operator gains bifacial yield and lower land and vegetation-management costs. The discussion ranges across LCOE and why Doug believes cattle solar can be the cheapest way to build, the UK "developer bloodbath" and spam grid applications, cable-factory and high-voltage connection bottlenecks, Texas and ERCOT, GIS and how little land solar actually needs, and how RUTE's "fields" and "blooms" turn EPC crews into riggers with no pile-driving or trenching. Chapters: 0:00 Welcome and why this podcast exists 1:15 Doug's path: Indiana, Alaska fishing, mechanical engineering 5:04 Getting into solar and learning project finance 7:40 The 2011 pizza-box prototype and the case for cables 10:30 What "cables" really means: structural cables vs wires 12:13 Grants, pilots and proving it works in high wind 13:27 Cattle solar: free shade ranchers actually want 15:33 The clipper-ship analogy for wind loads 17:02 From utility-scale engineering to commercialising 20:39 Pairing ranchers with developers 21:26 The first commercial project: 120 kW in Oregon 22:23 Going coast to coast: the Georgia hurricane-zone build 30:38 The cost case: why cattle solar wins on LCOE 31:33 UK development costs and the developer bloodbath 36:06 Cable-factory and grid-connection bottlenecks 40:44 Texas and ERCOT: building transmission overnight 45:47 GIS and how little land solar really needs 48:44 Inside RUTE: fields, blooms and EPCs as riggers 51:34 Bankability, bootstrapping and route to market 1:01:14 The future: data centres, agrivoltaics and cattle solar 1:06:46 What's next: regional demonstration projects 1:07:12 Closing thoughts

10. juli 20261 h 8 min
episode Martin Heathcote: from Cleve Hill to Major Solar Delivery artwork

Martin Heathcote: from Cleve Hill to Major Solar Delivery

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2272772/fan_mail/new] Martin Heathcote brings a local perspective rooted in Cleve Hill, where he spent time as a boy working on the land long before the solar farm. In this episode, he reflects on his personal journey from farming and family business into a wider group spanning plant, waste, civils, environmental services and land based operations across the UK. The conversation explores how Heathcote Holdings grew through practical delivery, long term relationships and a strong people focused culture, while adapting to the demands of utility scale solar. Martin discusses local roots, staff culture, cross group capability and why he sees solar as a long term market shaped not just by construction, but by vegetation management, woodland creation, biodiversity work, land care, monitoring and recurring work over decades. He also speaks about the group’s willingness to invest in new methods and specialist equipment, including screw piling capability, alongside views on joint ventures, AI cameras, automation and the future of major solar construction. This episode offers a grounded owner level perspective on how local knowledge, family business values and practical investment can help support major solar construction and long term project delivery in the UK.

12. apr. 202637 min
episode David Mack: Solar O&M, Rural Growth and Resilience artwork

David Mack: Solar O&M, Rural Growth and Resilience

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2272772/fan_mail/new] This episode examines the operational backbone of the utility scale solar industry through a conversation with David Mack, CEO of a group of companies delivering services to solar projects across the UK, Ireland and the United States. Mack describes growing up on a farm in North Norfolk where his parents attempted to develop a wind turbine project in the 1990s. After his mother passed away when he was 8, the project remained a lasting influence. Decades later he revived the scheme and eventually delivered the turbine in 2022 after years of planning inquiries and legal challenges. The experience shaped his commitment to renewable energy and rural enterprise. The discussion explores how renewable energy projects can diversify farm income and create employment in rural communities. From this background Mack founded Everblue in 2015, focusing on operational services such as module cleaning, land management and environmental compliance. The wider group now includes SolarYield in the United States, AgriSolar which advises on biodiversity and agricultural integration and Novola, a geospatial platform for managing solar assets. A central theme of the episode is the operational complexity of large solar farms. Mack explains that scaling operations across gigawatt portfolios requires disciplined systems, training and repeatable processes. Small design decisions such as cable routing or inverter placement can significantly increase maintenance costs over a 30 to 40 year asset life. The conversation also addresses safety risks associated with photovoltaic systems. Solar farms can appear quiet and low risk but panels operate at high direct current voltages that remain energised in sunlight. Proper procedures, insulated equipment and stronger safety awareness are essential during maintenance activities such as module cleaning. Finally the episode reflects on the rapid growth of the solar sector, which has expanded to roughly 3 terawatt peak globally and could reach around 75 terawatt peak by mid century. Both speakers emphasise that the long term success of solar will depend not only on construction but on disciplined operations, maintenance and systemised industry practices that can scale worldwide.  00:00 Introduction and global solar context  00:48 David Mack background and early renewables exposure  03:04 Losing his mother and reviving the family wind project  05:15 Growing up on a farm in North Norfolk  06:45 Farming economics and renewable diversification  08:59 Planning battles and wind turbine opposition  13:21 Renewable development and community acceptance  18:11 Everblue group businesses and solar services  22:30 Operating solar portfolios at gigawatt scale  24:39 Systemising solar O&M operations  28:07 Solar safety risks and high voltage DC hazards  34:30 Solar farm design and long term O&M costs  38:54 Repowering challenges and technology evolution  44:13 Solar development and rural economic growth  46:25 Mental health and isolation in rural industries  49:53 The future of solar photovoltaics  58:47 Global solar growth toward 75 terawatt  1:01:11 Closing reflections on scaling solar

8. mar. 20261 h 1 min
episode UK’s First Nationally Significant Solar Farm - Clark Frost artwork

UK’s First Nationally Significant Solar Farm - Clark Frost

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2272772/fan_mail/new] In this episode of the Future of Solar Photovoltaics Podcast, Vikram Kumar speaks with Clark Frost of Heathcote Holdings about the civil engineering behind one of the UK’s largest solar infrastructure projects. Clark shares insights from over 36 years in construction, starting with the UK’s Youth Training Scheme (YTS) and progressing into large scale infrastructure and renewable energy projects. The conversation explores the practical realities of building solar farms at hundreds of megawatts scale, including land preparation, piling, drainage and site logistics. They discuss working on coastal alluvial ground, installing 12 metre screw piles, managing drainage across agricultural land and coordinating heavy machinery across a thousand acre construction site. The episode also covers the importance of enabling works, health and safety management and the increasing complexity of multi contractor solar developments. As the UK moves toward much larger solar projects, this discussion highlights how solar farms are evolving into major national infrastructure, combining civil engineering, electrical systems and long term energy investment. A rare behind the scenes look at how large scale solar farms are actually built. Timestamps  0:00 Introduction to the Future of Solar Photovoltaics Podcast   2:30 Clark Frost background and YTS construction training   4:30 Intersolar Munich and entering solar farm construction   6:30 Heathcote Holdings and industry collaboration   10:55 Civil works on the UK’s first nationally significant solar farm   13:50 Screw piles and building on alluvial soil   16:25 Moving 20,000 m³ of soil on a solar site   19:40 50 MW vs 400 MW solar farm scale   21:58 Managing logistics on a thousand acre site   24:20 Solar scale and half a million panels   28:00 Flood risk and agricultural land drainage   30:28 Labour shortages and construction safety   34:46 Electrical risks and quality control   37:38 Battery storage and future solar projects   40:17 Choosing reliable partners and contractors

5. mar. 202640 min