As solar farms are increasingly located on farmland, agrivoltaics offers a new pathway of potentially increasing farm output by combining agriculture with solar panels. The benefits could help overcome objections to using agricultural land for solar energy.
What is Agrivoltaics?
Agrivoltaics is a system where solar panels are placed on farmland in a way that farming can continue. There are three main types of systems, the USDA explained: elevated, inter-row, and a combination of the two. Elevated systems place solar panels above vegetation, usually at least 6 feet, so they can protect vegetation from extreme weather such as heavy rains or drought and also reduce sun exposure. In inter-row systems, vegetation is grown between rows of solar panels rather than beneath them. Crops usually have more access to direct sunlight than in elevated systems, and rows of panels can be spaced out widely enough to allow tractors to cultivate vegetation in between.
Dual use solar involving agrivoltaics is already utilized in more than 1 gigawatt of U.S. PV installations, according to the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. The American Farmland Trust projects that 83 percent of new solar capacity will be sited on farmland and ranchland, with nearly half of that on the most productive land, unless current policies change.