On a slightly more serious note, the attractions of generating one's own electricity and doing it from waste products are irresistible in the medium term for farmers, who must often deal with unstable power in rural areas.
I chose the pig farming industry with intention; their most recent and profitable barn designs have been BLOWING UP, catching fire and killing the herd inside. Why? Because this plan calls for building a concrete basement under said new barn... so they don't have to pump out the pigshit for YEARS at a time! The inevitable fermentation happens, methane builds up in the barn and one spark sets the whole thing off. There are hundreds of these barns, and dozens have burned in the past few years just as I've described.
It's completely insane, of course; not only is it a health and safety disaster waiting to blow up in the farmer's face, that waste product rotting under the barn could be cheaply reprocessed using biodigester technology. The main outputs are pasture ready composted fertilizer, much better than simply spraying pigshit directly on the ground, and methane, which is a hydrocarbon fuel source. One can burn it for heat, but using a fuel cell to process it gives the owner both electrical power AND heat, both big advantages in terms of saving costs.
Of course, Big Ag will likely jump on this innovation first since they can afford the steep initial investment. Because of the incredible benefits to the environment and the economy, we should subsidize the adoption of fuel cells everywhere, but especially to small farmers.
The boost to agricultural production and energy production, as well as the technological innovation brought about by the widespread adoption of fuel cells and smart grid technology would create an economic boom in this country the likes of which haven't been seen since 1998. Since it would be based on substantial productivity and technological gains, it need not be a boom and bust kind of cycle, either, just good old good times for everyone, not merely the 1 percenters.