Why in News?
- Union Budget 2026–27 has significantly increased allocation for PM-KUSUM to ₹5,000 crore, nearly doubling the outlay and signalling a renewed push toward solarisation of agriculture through decentralised renewable systems.
- Policy consultations indicate that Agri-Photovoltaics (AgriPV) may be institutionalised under a proposed National AgriPV Mission (~10 GW component) within PM-KUSUM 2.0.
- The issue has gained importance because India faces a structural challenge of balancing large-scale solar expansion (300 GW target by 2030) with preservation of agricultural land and food security.
Relevance
- GS III (Agriculture): Sustainable agriculture, farmer income, land use
- GS III (Environment & Energy): Renewable energy transition, climate resilience
Practice Question
- Q. “Agri-photovoltaics can resolve the land–energy conflict in India.” Discuss its potential and challenges. (250 words)
Conceptual clarity – What is AgriPV?
- AgriPV refers to a dual land-use system where the same agricultural land is simultaneously used for solar power generation and crop cultivation, thereby increasing overall land productivity per unit area.
- Unlike conventional solar farms that displace agriculture, AgriPV systems are designed to coexist with crops through elevated mounting structures, row spacing, or greenhouse integration, ensuring minimal disruption to farming activities.
- The approach is particularly relevant for India because over 55% of land is under agriculture, making large-scale land diversion for solar projects economically and politically challenging.
PM-KUSUM scheme
- Launched in 2019 (MNRE) to promote decentralised solar energy in agriculture, with three components:
- Component A: Small solar plants (up to 2 MW) on barren/fallow land.
- Component B: Standalone solar pumps for off-grid irrigation.
- Component C: Solarisation of grid-connected pumps.
- The 2026–27 budgetary push aims to:
- Expand solar pump coverage
- Integrate solar generation into farm-level energy systems
- Move toward farmer-centric energy entrepreneurship.
- Proposed inclusion of AgriPV under KUSUM 2.0 indicates a shift from:
- Energy access → integrated energy–agriculture production systems.
Technical models of AgriPV
- Elevated systems (2–5 metres height):
- Allow use of tractors, irrigation equipment, and multi-cropping beneath panels.
- Suitable for crops requiring moderate sunlight and mechanised farming.
- Row-based systems:
- Panels placed between crop rows → optimises sunlight distribution and minimises yield loss.
- Requires careful orientation (north-south alignment for uniform shading).
- Vertical bifacial panels:
- Capture sunlight from both sides → useful in regions with land constraints and high albedo surfaces.
- Greenhouse-integrated systems:
- Panels embedded in polyhouse structures → enable high-value horticulture with controlled microclimate.
Crop compatibility – agro-climatic optimisation
- Crop performance depends on shade tolerance, evapotranspiration rates, and sunlight requirements.
- Shade-tolerant crops (perform well under panels):
- Turmeric, ginger, leafy vegetables, medicinal plants like tulsi.
- Moderate sunlight crops:
- Tomato, onion, garlic → adaptable to partial shading.
- High sunlight crops:
- Cultivated in panel gaps → e.g., millets (ragi, jowar).
- Region-specific examples:
- Madhya Pradesh: tomato, onion, turmeric (semi-arid adaptation).
- Karnataka/Maharashtra: grapes, banana, chilli (mixed cropping systems).
- Key insight:
- AgriPV success requires location-specific design combining crop science + solar engineering.
Significance for India
Resolving land-use conflict
- Utility-scale solar requires ~4–5 acres per MW, creating competition with agriculture.
- AgriPV enables simultaneous energy and food production, reducing pressure on scarce land resources.
Enhancing farmer incomes
- Farmers gain multiple revenue streams:
- Electricity sales (feed-in tariffs)
- Land leasing to developers
- Continued crop production.
- Reduces income volatility → addresses agrarian distress and climate risks.
Supporting energy transition
- Contributes to:
- 300 GW solar target by 2030
- Reduction in diesel-based irrigation emissions.
- Promotes distributed renewable energy systems, reducing transmission losses.
Environmental benefits
- Panel shading reduces:
- Evapotranspiration → improves water-use efficiency (critical in water-stressed regions).
- Protects crops from:
- Heat stress, erratic rainfall, hailstorms.
- Enables:
- Climate-resilient agriculture under changing weather patterns.
Rural economic transformation
- Enables:
- Cold storage, food processing, irrigation automation.
- Strengthens:
- Rural value chains and localised energy economies.
Emerging business models
- Farmer-owned systems:
- High autonomy but requires access to credit and technical capacity.
- FPO/cooperative aggregation:
- Economies of scale → improved financing and bargaining power.
- Developer-led leasing model:
- Farmers receive fixed rent or revenue share → reduces risk but limits control.
- Public sector/community model:
- State agencies deploy systems for local energy needs and irrigation.
Key challenges
- High capital intensity:
- Elevated mounting structures increase costs by 30–50% over conventional solar.
- Lack of standardisation:
- No uniform design benchmarks for:
- Panel height
- Crop compatibility
- Spacing norms.
- No uniform design benchmarks for:
- Agricultural uncertainty:
- Improper shading can reduce yields, making farmers risk-averse.
- Regulatory ambiguity:
- Unclear policies on:
- Land classification (agriculture vs energy use)
- Grid connectivity
- Tariff structures.
- Unclear policies on:
- Limited empirical evidence:
- Only ~50 pilot projects → insufficient data for large-scale scaling.
- Institutional coordination gaps:
- Weak convergence between:
- MNRE, Agriculture Ministry, State DISCOMs.
- Weak convergence between:
Way forward
- National AgriPV Mission (10 GW target):
- Provide clear roadmap and scale pilots into national programme.
- Viability Gap Funding (VGF):
- Offset high initial costs → improve financial viability.
- Standardisation and R&D:
- Develop agro-climatic zone-wise:
- Crop–panel matrices
- Design templates.
- Develop agro-climatic zone-wise:
- Regulatory reforms:
- Clear guidelines on:
- Land use
- Tariff mechanisms
- Grid integration.
- Clear guidelines on:
- Institutional convergence:
- Integrate AgriPV with:
- PM-KUSUM
- FPO schemes
- State agriculture extension services.
- Integrate AgriPV with:
- Capacity building:
- Train farmers in:
- Solar management
- Crop adaptation strategies.
- Train farmers in:
Prelims pointers
- PM-KUSUM → launched 2019 (MNRE).
- AgriPV → dual-use land system (solar + agriculture).
- Solar target → 300 GW by 2030.
- Net-zero target → 2070


