New Solar Panels Allow Farmers to See the Light
Researchers harness sunlight to harvest energy and food together, utilizing the full spectrum of light to improve outputs.
New Solar Panels Allow Farmers to See the Light
Researchers harness sunlight to harvest energy and food together, utilizing the full spectrum of light to improve outputs.
Arable land is at an all-time premium. Since the last ice age, humans have cleared one-third of the earth’s forests and two-thirds of its wild grasslands, much of it for agriculture. And as the world population—8 billion as of last November—continues to expand, there’s ever-increasing pressure on farmland to produce not only more food but clean energy as well.
In places such as Yakima, Washington, it’s created competition for space as land-hungry solar arrays gobble up available fields. Last month, the state’s Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council approved plans to cover 1,700 acres of agricultural land with photovoltaic (PV) panels, brushing aside the county’s moratorium on solar projects and fueling community concerns over the long-term impacts of losing cropland.
A recent study from the University of California, Davis, however, shows how farmers may soon be able to harvest crops and energy together, on common ground. Researchers concluded that bands within the visible light spectrum can be filtered and harnessed separately—blue lightwaves to generate solar power and red lightwaves to grow fruits and vegetables—to make maximum use of farmland, all while lowering heat stress and reducing crop waste.
“Why does [agriculture] have to be a zero-sum game if we can optimize the land for both?” asks Majdi Abou Najm, an associate professor in the Department of Land, Air and Water Resources at UC Davis and an Institute of the Environment fellow, who co-authored the paper.
Photons, or the particles that make up light, have different properties, he explains: Blue ones have higher energy than their red counterparts, resulting in light with shorter wavelength and higher frequency. While that gives blue light the jolt needed to generate power, the extra pulsing also results in higher temperatures.
“From a plant perspective, red photons are the efficient ones,” says Abou Najm. “They don’t make the plant feel hot.”
Through computer modeling, Abou Najm and lead author Matteo Camporese, an associate professor in the Department of Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering at the University of Padova, found that applying red lightwaves to plants increases photosynthesis and carbon assimilation—the process by which they metabolize carbon dioxide into organic compounds—while lowering transpiration. In other words, under the cooler spectrum, “crops can get the same amount of CO2 using less water,” he says.
Read More
Opinion: With Community Solar, It’s Not Renewable Energy vs. Rural Character
While their research was inspired by hydroponic light applications used in indoor farming systems, “those come at a high energy cost,” says Abou Najim. “We decided to use sunlight as our input.”
One of the main goals of the study, says Abou Najim, is “to motivate the industry to create a new generation of solar panels.” Camporese sees potential in organic solar cells, which, unlike the shiny, metallic, silicon-based surfaces, are derived from carbon-based compounds. Thin and translucent, the cells are applied like a film onto various surfaces, including glass. This technology could be used to develop photo-selective PV panels that filter blue light to generate power, he says, while passing the red spectrum to crops planted directly below.
The growing field of agrivoltaics, wherein land is used for both food production and energy generation, has, in fact, made land use more efficient by interspersing conventional solar arrays between rows of crops. (Solar grazing is a variation where livestock pasture in between the arrays.) The angled panels shade leafy vegetables and heat-sensitive fruits from the day’s most intense rays; the plants, meanwhile, transpire moisture and lower the temperature beneath the heat-sensitive cells, thereby improving their performance.
However, the plants grown through agrivoltaics are grown in partial shade, and “less light typically means less yield,” says Camporese. This effectively sets a limit on the density of solar panels and plantings on co-generation farms. But translucent arrays would allow for full field coverage of both, he notes, maximizing land use and giving a big bump to per-acre productivity.
Last May, the researchers conducted a limited field study of photo-selective cropping at the UC Davis Agricultural Experiment Station. The team planted processing tomatoes—a common Sacramento Valley crop—on small, equal-sized plots, one canopied with a photo-selective red filter, another with blue and a third left uncovered as a control.
After approximately four months, including a record heatwave in early September, the two filtered plots each yielded about a third less than the uncovered one. Yet when sorted for quality—ripe, unripe or “bad”—the control plot accounted for twice the amount of rotten tomatoes. “So the filters helped in reducing heat stress,” says Abou Najm, and “cut [crop] wastage by more than half.”
Learn More
Crop and Energy Production Merge in Iowa Project
Add energy generation on top and the net gain would more than compensate for the diminished harvest, he says. By co-locating crops and solar generation, “100 percent becomes a very low number when you can get 120- or 140-percent yields.”
And for countries and regions facing a tight squeeze on farmland, that makes increased productivity even more valuable, especially given that generating clean energy requires 10 times more land per unit of power than fossil fuels.
Abou Najm also sees the canopied approach as a way for farmers to build climate resilience. Filtering the sun helps the soil retain moisture and shield farmworkers from harsh rays, while lower transpiration means less water is needed for crops. And by generating their own power, farmers could offset rising energy costs and nudge the industry towards embracing electric equipment and vehicles, he adds.
“By 2050, we’ll have [an additional] two billion people on this planet, and we’ll need 60 percent more food, 40 percent more water and 50 percent more energy” than is currently produced, says Abou Najm. Research needs to occur on a transformative level in order to meet those ballooning needs.
By maximizing the solar spectrum, “we’re optimizing an endlessly sustainable resource,” he adds. “If a technology kicks in that can develop these panels, then the sky is the limit on how optimized we can be.”
Follow us
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Want to republish a Modern Farmer story?
We are happy for Modern Farmer stories to be shared, and encourage you to republish our articles for your audience. When doing so, we ask that you follow these guidelines:
Please credit us and our writers
For the author byline, please use “Author Name, Modern Farmer.” At the top of our stories, if on the web, please include this text and link: “This story was originally published by Modern Farmer.”
Please make sure to include a link back to either our home page or the article URL.
At the bottom of the story, please include the following text:
“Modern Farmer is a nonprofit initiative dedicated to raising awareness and catalyzing action at the intersection of food, agriculture, and society. Read more at <link>Modern Farmer</link>.”
Use our widget
We’d like to be able to track our stories, so we ask that if you republish our content, you do so using our widget (located on the left hand side of the article). The HTML code has a built-in tracker that tells us the data and domain where the story was published, as well as view counts.
Check the image requirements
It’s your responsibility to confirm you're licensed to republish images in our articles. Some images, such as those from commercial providers, don't allow their images to be republished without permission or payment. Copyright terms are generally listed in the image caption and attribution. You are welcome to omit our images or substitute with your own. Charts and interactive graphics follow the same rules.
Don’t change too much. Or, ask us first.
Articles must be republished in their entirety. It’s okay to change references to time (“today” to “yesterday”) or location (“Iowa City, IA” to “here”). But please keep everything else the same.
If you feel strongly that a more material edit needs to be made, get in touch with us at [email protected]. We’re happy to discuss it with the original author, but we must have prior approval for changes before publication.
Special cases
Extracts. You may run the first few lines or paragraphs of the article and then say: “Read the full article at Modern Farmer” with a link back to the original article.
Quotes. You may quote authors provided you include a link back to the article URL.
Translations. These require writer approval. To inquire about translation of a Modern Farmer article, contact us at [email protected]
Signed consent / copyright release forms. These are not required, provided you are following these guidelines.
Print. Articles can be republished in print under these same rules, with the exception that you do not need to include the links.
Tag us
When sharing the story on social media, please tag us using the following: - Twitter (@ModFarm) - Facebook (@ModernFarmerMedia) - Instagram (@modfarm)
Use our content respectfully
Modern Farmer is a nonprofit and as such we share our content for free and in good faith in order to reach new audiences. Respectfully,
No selling ads against our stories. It’s okay to put our stories on pages with ads.
Don’t republish our material wholesale, or automatically; you need to select stories to be republished individually.
You have no rights to sell, license, syndicate, or otherwise represent yourself as the authorized owner of our material to any third parties. This means that you cannot actively publish or submit our work for syndication to third party platforms or apps like Apple News or Google News. We understand that publishers cannot fully control when certain third parties automatically summarize or crawl content from publishers’ own sites.
Keep in touch
We want to hear from you if you love Modern Farmer content, have a collaboration idea, or anything else to share. As a nonprofit outlet, we work in service of our community and are always open to comments, feedback, and ideas. Contact us at [email protected].by Naoki Nitta, Modern Farmer
January 16, 2023
Modern Farmer Weekly
Solutions Hub
Innovations, ideas and inspiration. Actionable solutions for a resilient food system.
ExploreExplore other topics
Share With Us
We want to hear from Modern Farmer readers who have thoughtful commentary, actionable solutions, or helpful ideas to share.
SubmitNecessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and are used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies.
Very interesting research! I would love to see the actual papers written at UC Davis to help clarify how to calculate a proper return on investment “theory”. I realize though that these solar panels still need to be developed.
Very encouraging move. Farmers particularly in tropical regions can hope for better living through such studies and results when implemented..
I would like to do some research of these panels in Maine. Droughts are more common, energy prices are climbing, climate crisis is in full swing, as the article states, the Sun is an “endlessly sustainable source”.
There was no PV used in the experiment. Rather, they just used colored filters. It’s a long stretch to develop transparent pv cells.
Great forward thinking! But would this be viable on farms that rely on rain, or even overhead irrigation? I see the experiment had drip irrigation. How would water get past panels to the plants?
This is incredible! I wonder how the red light affects bees foraging on flowering crops, and performance of honey bee colonies in hives? I do not know the answer. Seems like this panel may be useful in extreme hot climates to minimize heat stress on hives of honey bees, but will the bees leave the hives to forage?
What solar panels filter the blue to generate energy and pass the red?
At http://www.lleaf.com we shift the spectrum of sunlight to increase the growth rate of plants (20% average) by spectrum selective absorption of green light and producing a net increase in red light.
Naomi, we have developed and patented fabrics that go a step further and convert sunlight energy (UV to visible spectrum) and emit red light. Our use is in human and animal clothing for red light driven therapeutic wellness, shade cooling and UV protection, but we have always thought these textiles should be used to cover crops. This research proves it. What do you think? See lumiton.com.
We can do this at our organic farm in the Finger Lakes Region of New York State with our Colleagues at Clarkson University, Cornell University, Alfred University, and SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry. The soybeans and milkweed will be replacements and improvements over what is now made from petroleum.