Abstract

Solar photovoltaic (PV) energy is positioned to play a major role in the electricity generation mix of Mediterranean countries. Nonetheless, substantial increase in ground-mounted PV installed capacity could lead to competition with the agricultural use of land. A way to avert the peril is the electricity-food dual use of land or agro-photovoltaics (APV). Here, the profitability of a hypothetical APV system deployed on irrigated arable lands of southwestern Spain is analyzed. The basic generator design, comprised of fixed-tilt opaque monofacial PV modules on a 5 m ground-clearance substructure, featured 555.5 kWp/ha. Two APV shed orientations, due south and due southwest, were compared. Two 4-year annual-crop rotations, cultivated beneath the heightened PV modules and with each rotation spanning 24 ha, were studied. One crop rotation was headed by early potato, while the other was headed by processing tomato. All 9 crops involved fulfilled the two-fold condition of being usually cultivated in the area and compatible with APV shed intermitent shading. Crop revenues under the partial shading of PV modules were derived from official average yields in the area, through the use of two alternative sets of coefficients generated for low and high crop-yield shade-induced penalty. Likewise, two irrigation water sources, surface and underground, were compared. Crop total production costs, PV system investment and operating costs and revenues from the sale of electricity, were calculated. The internal rates of return (IRRs) obtained ranged from a minimum of 3.8% for the combination of southwest orientation, early-potato rotation, groundwater and high shade-induced crop-yield penalty, to a maximum of 5.6% for the combination of south orientation, processing-tomato rotation, surface water and low shade-induced crop-yield penalty.

Highlights

  • Introduction and ObjectivesNowadays, most countries worldwide are aware of the importance of preserving nature

  • A well-established metric to assess the performance of dual-land use systems like agroforestry [51] and APV, is the land equivalent ratio (LER)

  • The benchmark yardstick for energy generation systems, the levelized cost of electricity (LCoE), computes cost relative to electricity yield, but does not incorporate the crop production activity

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Summary

Introduction

Most countries worldwide are aware of the importance of preserving nature. Environment protection includes, amongst others, measures to limit the use of non-recyclable materials and to reduce the emission of greenhouse-effect gases (GHGs). Reduction in GHGs emission entails burning less fossil fuels and increasing the share of renewable energies in the electricity generation mix. The major renewable sources of electricity, wind and solar, intrinsically non-dispatchable due to the intermittency of their resource, could be backed-up by hydrogen fuel cells in the future. European Union (EU) member states are promoting increases in wind and solar installed capacity. Spain and Italy planned national levels of 42% and 30%, respectively, of energy from renewable sources in their gross final energy consumption in 2030 [1,2]

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