Abstract

This study explores the incorporation of solar energy and project management in sustainable agriculture in Baluchistan, Pakistan. A 10-acre farm with a solar-powered water reservoir supports up to 10 irrigation sets, illustrating a tactical synthesis of reserve management and environmental stewardship. The economic scrutiny confirmations that the agronomy of onions, potatoes, and spinach on this farm might harvest a profit oscillating from 1.537 to 1.62 million Rupees, with a breakeven point valued at 1.76 years. This model serves as a beacon for profitable, eco-friendly agronomic practices, leveraging solar power to overwhelmed water insufficiency challenges. Despite the global dependence on fossil fuels, solar energy's interest has been regular, expressly in agriculture. The findings reveal a stark variance in the practicality of solar energy across diverse sectors due to Pakistan's inconsistent national grid. The research underlines the critical need for particular project management to harness the full latent of solar power and set a usual for future activities in lucrative and ecologically cognizant agronomy.

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