People are increasingly trying to grow both food and clean energy on the same land to help meet the challenges of climate change, drought and a growing global population that just topped 8 billion. This effort includes agrivoltaics, in which crops are grown under the shade of solar panels, ideally with less water.
Now scientists from the University of California, Davis, are investigating how to better harvest the sun 鈥 and its optimal light spectrum 鈥 to make agrivoltaic systems more efficient in arid agricultural regions like California.
, published in Earth鈥檚 Future, a journal of the American Geophysical Union, found that the red part of the light spectrum is more efficient for growing plants, while the blue part of the spectrum is better used for solar production.
A door opener
The study鈥檚 results could help guide global interest in agrivoltaics and identify potential applications for those systems.
鈥淭his paper is a door opener for all sorts of technological advancements,鈥 said corresponding author , an associate professor at the Department of Land, Air and Water Resources and a fellow at the 嘿嘿视频 . He conducted the study with first author Matteo Camporese of the University of Padova in Italy, who came to 嘿嘿视频 as a Fulbright visiting scholar. 鈥淭oday鈥檚 solar panels take all the light and try to make the best of it. But what if a new generation of photovoltaics could take the blue light for clean energy and pass the red light onto the crops, where it is most efficient for photosynthesis?鈥
For the study, the scientists developed a photosynthesis and transpiration model to account for different light spectra. The model reproduced the response of various plants, including lettuce, basil and strawberry, to different light spectra in controlled lab conditions. A sensitivity analysis suggested the blue part of the spectrum is best filtered out to produce solar energy while the red spectrum can be optimized to grow food.
This work was further tested this past summer on tomato plants at 嘿嘿视频 agricultural research fields in collaboration with 嘿嘿视频 Assistant Professor Andre Daccache from the Department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering.
Guiding light
In an era of shrinking viable land, understanding how plants respond to different light spectra is a key step toward designing systems that balance sustainable land management with water use and food production, the study noted.
鈥淲e cannot feed 2 billion more people in 30 years by being just a little more water-efficient and continuing as we do,鈥 Abou Najm said. 鈥淲e need something transformative, not incremental. If we treat the sun as a resource, we can work with shade and generate electricity while producing crops underneath. Kilowatt hours become a secondary crop you can harvest.鈥
The study was funded by a U.S. Department of State Fulbright Research Scholarship, 嘿嘿视频 and the National Institute of Food and Agriculture.
Media Resources
Media Contacts:
- Majdi Abou Najm, 嘿嘿视频 Institute of the Environment/Land, Air, Water Resources, mabounajm@ucdavis.edu
- Kat Kerlin, 嘿嘿视频 News and Media Relations, 530-750-9195, kekerlin@ucdavis.edu