Sustainability trade-offs at the nexus of solar energy, agriculture, and biodiversity
A rapid transition to renewable energy is necessary for achieving global decarbonization targets, but siting conflicts, particularly beyond the built environment, remain a key barrier to sustainable development. At the same time, climate-induced pressures on biodiversity intensify the socio-ecological trade-offs within the energy-agriculture-biodiversity nexus. Using New York State as a case study, we assess the geographic implications of utility-scale solar energy development under competing land-use priorities. We apply a mixed-integer linear programming (MILP) optimization model to evaluate solar buildout across three distinct scenarios: minimizing cost, prioritizing agricultural preservation, and conserving biodiversity, employing a lexicographic hierarchy to enforce a strict ordering of stakeholder priorities. Results indicate that New York can meet its mid-century decarbonization goals by deploying 46,216 MWdc of solar energy, however, achieving this goal involves considerable land-use trade-offs. A cost-minimizing scenario disproportionately targets pasture and hay lands (>40,000 ha), nearly half of which overlap with grassland bird habitat and broader biodiversity areas. Prioritizing agriculture spares ∼80 % of farmland but creates potential for deforestation of over 41,000 ha. Biodiversity-conscious siting avoids ecologically sensitive areas and increases the annualized total costs by 0.17 %, indicating economic feasibility. Our findings highlight the need for spatially informed, integrative land-use strategies that reconcile climate goals with ecological and agricultural values. By linking geospatial optimization with socio-ecological criteria, this work contributes a transferable framework to inform just and ecologically responsible energy transitions in multifunctional landscapes, offering new insights into how geography can advance sustainable development.
Citation Information
| Publication Year | 2026 |
|---|---|
| Title | Sustainability trade-offs at the nexus of solar energy, agriculture, and biodiversity |
| DOI | 10.1016/j.geosus.2026.100483 |
| Authors | Adam Gallaher, Theodore Koch, Elizabeth L. Kalies, Peter B. Woodbury, Steven Mark Grodsky |
| Publication Type | Article |
| Publication Subtype | Journal Article |
| Series Title | Geography and Sustainability |
| Index ID | 70276544 |
| Record Source | USGS Publications Warehouse |
| USGS Organization | Coop Res Unit Leetown |