Co-location of sheep grazing and solar energy production yields agrotechnological synergies
CONTEXT
Agrivoltaics—the co-location of solar energy and agricultural production—may reduce land-use competition and boost revenues for landowners. Sheep grazing in solar facilities (i.e., solar grazing/agrivoltaic grazing systems) is increasingly common in agricultural areas. Solar grazing can provide land access to flock owners and support agricultural viability via payments for vegetation management. However, there is a need for more data on how co-location of sheep grazing and solar energy production affects flock health, stocking rates, and feedback loops for maintenance of vegetation in solar facilities across regions.
OBJECTIVE
Our objective was to better understand synergies and tradeoffs associated with agrivoltaic grazing systems by investigating applied grazing management questions as well as questions regarding agrotechnological co-benefits related to simultaneous flock health and vegetation management in solar facilities.
METHODS
We tested effects of sheep stocking rates (0 to 10 sheep per ha–1), site preparation (fallow vs. legume seed-mix planting), and microclimate (panel-shaded areas vs. panel interspaces) on herbage yield and nutritional quality, flock health and condition, and a vegetation management success index. We collected these data across two grazing seasons in an operational, 21.85-ha photovoltaic solar facility (18 MW) established on a previous old field in New York State, USA.
RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS
Shade from solar panels negatively affected herbage yield. We detected no significant differences in herbage yield or vegetation management outcomes between fallow and planted legume plots, suggesting that regrowth from native seed banks in solar facilities on previous old fields may be an economical alternative to seeding for sheep forage relative. Sheep stocking rates affected flock health and condition; we identified an optimal stocking rate of 8 sheep per ha–1 for achieving sufficient herbage yield and quality, maintaining flock health, and preventing vegetation overgrowth from shading solar panels at our study site. Solar grazing can yield an agrotechnological synergy supporting healthy forage, healthy sheep, and vegetation management in community-scale (i.e.,
Citation Information
| Publication Year | 2025 |
|---|---|
| Title | Co-location of sheep grazing and solar energy production yields agrotechnological synergies |
| DOI | 10.1016/j.agsy.2025.104403 |
| Authors | Nikola Kochendoerfer, A. Sophie Westbrook, Christina McMillan, P. Andrew Lapierre, Muhammad Zaman, Scott Morris, Antonio DiTommaso, Steven Grodsky |
| Publication Type | Article |
| Publication Subtype | Journal Article |
| Series Title | Agricultural Systems |
| Index ID | 70269937 |
| Record Source | USGS Publications Warehouse |
| USGS Organization | Coop Res Unit Leetown |