Powering Rural Futures: Purdue’s Agrivoltaics Initiative for Sustainable Growth

Spread the word:
Facebook
X
LinkedIn

Institute for Sustainable Future News:  Rural communities across the Midwest, whose agricultural economies and energy infrastructure are frequently threatened by extreme weather events such as hailstorms, heat waves and high winds, are getting a new lifeline through a National Science Foundation–funded project at Purdue University.

The NSF’s Regional Resilience Innovation Incubator (R2I2): Midwest Agrivoltaics for Resilient Communities (MARC), supported under grant #2519425, is designed to help these communities become more resilient by combining agriculture with solar energy — to improve resilience from local to national levels. This phase 1 grant positions the team to compete for a Phase 2 grant worth up to $15M for an additional 5 years.

Image: Institute for a Sustainable Future

Agrivoltaics, which allows the dual use of land for agricultural production and solar energy generation, holds great promise to diversify farm income, reduce power outages, and increase energy production as energy demand soars. But agrivoltaics systems have seen slow adoption in the Midwest due to uncertainties about land use trade-offs, lack of trusted information about community impacts and benefits, and concerns from farmers and communities about economic viability and performance under extreme weather. The incubator intends to bring together community members, stakeholders and experts to fill those gaps.

More to Explore:

Executive Director Position is Now Open for Applications

CHINA’S LARGEST SOLAR FARM IS DOING A LOT MORE THAN GENERATING ENERGY

I&M Power Reaches Deal to Buy Electricity from Wind Farm in NE Indiana

Why Kansas could be at a turning point on solar

Voters are mad about utility bills. Republicans are blaming some in their own party

3D solar tower increases capacity factor 50%, triples solar surface area