It wouldn't be just that. Wind farms would be the next step.
The demand for wind farm technicians outweighs the supply by about 100 to 1.
Well I thought you were discussing agricultural farms and owning one.
Wind farms are indeed in demand, but they are hindered by geography and public outrage. In addition, the Farm Bill provides no real subsidies for farmers to place wind power facilities on their property should they reside in a area that has a lot of wind.
Ethanol on the other hand is a far more lucrative business for farmers to get into because of the amount of government cash they can receive. An ethanol plant costs around $1.3 million to construct while a wind farm can cost 50 times that.
That said, I'm completely against ethanol production and the subsidies that come with it. Ethanol production is ridiculously inefficient and instead of research much more efficient fuels such as switch grass or sugar cane, we hand out cash to corn farmers. Pisses me off.