Wind and solar energy leases are showing up on kitchen tables across Nebraska and Minnesota. The pitch sounds great: passive income for 30-40 years, and your land stays productive. But the standard lease the developer puts in front of you is written to protect the developer — not you.
Before you sign anything, here are five things every farmer should know.

1. The Lease Term Is Longer Than You Think
Most wind energy leases start with a 30-year term, plus extension options. With renewals, you could be locked in for 50+ years. That’s not a lease — it’s a generational commitment. Make sure you understand (and negotiate) the total possible duration.
2. Compensation Should Be Negotiated, Not Accepted
The first number a developer offers is rarely the best number. Per-turbine payments, per-acre land use fees, and revenue-sharing percentages are all negotiable. Don’t accept the standard offer without a conversation.
3. Crop Damage Clauses Need Teeth
During construction and maintenance, heavy equipment will cross your fields. The question is: who pays for the damage, and how is it calculated? A good lease includes specific formulas for crop damage, soil compaction, and drainage repair — not vague promises.
4. Decommissioning Matters More Than You Think
When the turbines come down in 30 years, who pays to remove them? If the developer goes bankrupt, you could be stuck with concrete foundations and steel towers on your land. Require a decommissioning bond or escrow — funded upfront, not at the end.

5. Get Your Own Attorney
The developer’s “landowner liaison” is not your advocate. They work for the developer. Before you sign a lease that will affect your land for decades, get independent legal counsel from an attorney who understands both energy law and agriculture.
Schedule a free consultation with Midwest Ag Law. We’ll review your lease, identify the red flags, and negotiate better terms on your behalf.