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Crops, cows, and solar panels? Why farmers are harvesting sunlight.

The corn has been collected and the pumpkin season is almost done. But on this University of Massachusetts Amherst research farm, there is still one last harvest taking place – of sunlight.

“Agrivoltaics,” or dual-use solar panels, are placed between or above rows of plants to collect the sun’s energy. To proponents, these solar arrays represent the future of farming – a way to collect energy while also using the land productively, and helping farmers at the same time.

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The solar industry is facing increasing criticism for taking up too much agricultural land. Massachusetts farmers are testing solutions that grow both food and power.

These dual-use panels can support the solar needs of Massachusetts and “potentially support the agricultural economy and farmers that are facing various different stresses,” says Dwayne Breger, director of the University of Massachusetts Amherst Clean Energy Extension team.

Those stresses include droughts and financial instability – not only here in Massachusetts, but across the United States.

There are still hurdles to overcome with dual-use solar, Dr. Breger acknowledges. Installation costs can range as high as $1 million, and tapping into an outdated energy grid can be challenging.

But in western Massachusetts, a growing number of projects are showing just how commercially viable it could be.

The corn has been collected, the cabbage gathered, and the pumpkin season is almost done. But on this University of Massachusetts Amherst research farm, there is still one last harvest taking place – a harvest of sunlight.

“Agrivoltaics,” or dual-use solar panels, are placed between or above rows of plants to collect the sun’s energy. Here, they resemble metal versions of the old orchards that dot other hills in this region. Back in the spring, farmers planted corn, cabbage, and other vegetables below their metal canopies.

To Dwayne Breger, director of the University of Massachusetts Amherst Clean Energy Extension team running this research site, this solar array represents the future of farming – a way to collect energy while also using the land productively, and helping farmers at the same time.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

The solar industry is facing increasing criticism for taking up too much agricultural land. Massachusetts farmers are testing solutions that grow both food and power.

Agrivoltaics, he says, can support the solar needs of Massachusetts and “potentially support the agricultural economy and farmers that are facing various different stresses.”

Those stresses include droughts and financial instability – not only here in Massachusetts, but across the United States.

“Small farming is a tough business,” says Keith Hevenor, communications manager at the Boston-based solar company Nexamp. The decades of predictable income that agrivoltaics can offer, he says, “is giving them that certainty to keep forging ahead.”

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