This article explores the land-use competition of biofuel production, solar farms on agricultural land and food security. It argues that solar farms produce multitudes more energy than biofuels while allowing for crop production underneath, easing the land-use trade-off between food production, energy production and farm income.
Abstract
Policies aiding biofuels have supported farm income and rural communities but have also put pressure on food security with questionable benefits related to carbon emissions. Photovoltaics (PV) are poised to become central to the overall energy decarbonization strategy, but because of land requirements they are likely to be developed on farmland, reigniting concerns related to food security. In this work, we study strategies for co-producing food and energy from corn croplands. We find that while traditional PV displaces crops, they can harvest orders of magnitude more energy per unit of land than biofuels. Additionally, systems with elevated PV panels (called PV Aglectric, Agrivoltaics, or Agrophotovoltaics) that allow for crop production underneath them can increase energy production and reduce carbon emissions with minimal impact on crop production. This technology can ease the trade-off between farm income, energy production, crop production, and energy decarbonization. Adoption of PV Aglectric systems may be hindered by high capital costs, but this barrier could be overcome with policy support, especially when crop prices are highly volatile.
Reference
Jonathan W. Turnley, Alison Grant, Val Z. Schull, Davide Cammarano, Juan Sesmero, Rakesh Agrawal,The viability of photovoltaics on agricultural land: Can PV solve the food vs fuel debate?Journal of Cleaner Production. Volume 469, 2024.
Read more here. See also the TABLE explainer Rewilding and its implications for agriculture.
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