Agrivoltaics as a climate-smart and resilient solution for midday depression in photosynthesis in dryland regions

Abstract Global projections of increased temperature and aridity have exacerbated concerns over our potential to achieve Sustainable Development Goals associated with food, energy, and water futures. We evaluated the implications of an agrivoltaics approach—combining agriculture and solar photovolta...

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Main Authors: Greg A. Barron-Gafford, Patrick Murphy, Alyssa Salazar, Kai Lepley, Nesrine Rouini, Isaiah Barnett-Moreno, Jordan E. Macknick
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2025-06-01
Series:npj Sustainable Agriculture
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s44264-025-00073-1
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Summary:Abstract Global projections of increased temperature and aridity have exacerbated concerns over our potential to achieve Sustainable Development Goals associated with food, energy, and water futures. We evaluated the implications of an agrivoltaics approach—combining agriculture and solar photovoltaics—on the microclimate growing conditions of crop species. While agrivoltaics is being explored globally for its potential to reduce soil evaporation rates and impact yield, empirical research on the mechanistic drivers of the potential for agrivoltaics is needed. Agrivoltaics mitigated the midday depression in photosynthesis experienced by crops grown in hot and arid environments, which led to reduced water stress, equal or greater daily carbon assimilation, and equal or greater yield across all crops. Our findings indicate agrivoltaics could be a climate-smart agricultural approach, and the diurnal resolution of our data points towards mechanisms for optimizing agrivoltaic designs to align with Sustainable Development Goals for food and energy production and water savings.
ISSN:2731-9202