Skip to content
Agriculture Farming Rural, Energy

Aussie farmers don’t have to choose between growing food and hosting solar; report shows they can do both

Farm Renewables Consulting, Progressive Agriculture 2 mins read

27th November 2023

A report out today (Wednesday) shows Australia has enormous potential for grazing sheep and growing fruits and vegetables under solar panels, but better planning, more research and targeted government policy is needed to make these options work for local farmers.

Agrivoltaics (also referred to as ‘agrisolar’) refers to co-locating agricultural production systems with solar development. 

Co-locating our food and energy systems on developed land presents a promising pathway for farmers, solar developers and governments, provided it is well planned and executed. 

The report Pursuing an Agrivoltaic future in Australia gathered insights from farmers, government representatives, consultants, researchers, and solar developers, on the challenges and opportunities of agriculture and solar developments. EnergyCo was a key partner in the delivery of two workshops contributing to the knowledge gathering process.

The authors found agrivoltaic adoption has been slow, because of knowledge gaps, technical and economic impediments, poor planning, and a lack of clear policy guidance at development stage.

Karin Stark, Director of Farm Renewables Consulting and co-author of the report said: “I found there was considerable optimism for the feasibility of agrivoltaics in Australia, but change is required to ensure future solar developments are undertaken in a way that guarantees successful outcomes.”

“International studies have highlighted several benefits associated with solar over crops, such as enhanced yields in the case of certain produce like berries, tomatoes and leafy greens.

"Solar over vineyards has also demonstrated benefits to the sugar and alcohol content of grapes given the fruit’s sensitivity to hot weather. Overseas research has indicated advantages including increased soil moisture, reduced irrigation demands, protection from excessive heat, and safeguarding against frost and hail damage.”

Andrew Bomm, consultant with Progressive Agriculture and co-author of the report said: “Solar grazing can have clear economic benefits for both solar developers and graziers, and play an important role in achieving community support for large scale solar development in rural areas.”

“One key insight that came out loud and clear was that solar grazing systems require adequate planning and design prior to construction to avoid major problems later.”

The report underscored the need for research and demonstration sites, supportive policy, and knowledge sharing to pave the way for adoption of agrivoltaics in Australia on a significant scale.

The report’s policy recommendations include:

  • The Australian government provide funding to develop best practice guidelines for developers, operators, and farmers for successful agrivoltaics adoption.
  • The Australian government collaborate with the renewables industry to co-invest in ongoing essential research into agrivoltaics in different areas marked for solar development, and for different farming systems such as grazing, viticulture and horticulture. 
  • The Australian government develop a coherent framework of carbon and biodiversity incentives to maximise best practice agrivoltaics adoption, across both broadacre (grazing) and horticultural systems.
  • There is an intergovernmental agreement between Commonwealth and State Governments to ensure consistent framework across Energy and Agricultural agencies.

 

The report can be found here:  https://drive.google.com/file/d/1nRZ_W1BAqaKrjbgNz1JPqt3dpa_ctuJm/view?usp=drive_link

 

Available for interview:

  • Report co-author Karin Stark, Farm Renewables Consulting
  • Report co-author Andrew Bomm, Progressive Agriculture
  • Farmer Libby Skipworth - a farmer with solar on her property investigating raising panels for agrivoltaics

ENDS

 


Contact details:

Karin Stark 0467 602 886 / [email protected]

 

More from this category

  • Energy, Government QLD
  • 09/12/2025
  • 06:31
Climate Media Centre

TALENT ALERT: Experts warn Queensland’s Energy Roadmap risks higher bills, weaker reliability and lost jobs

9th December 2025 The State Government is planning to legislate their Energy Roadmap this week – weakening Queensland's renewable energy commitments and extending the life of ageing coal fired power stations. Leading energy, investor, conservation and community experts have warned the new energy bill risks leaving households exposed to higher electricity costs and pushing clean energy investment interstate. Instead of a clear transition pathway, the roadmap removes legislated renewable energy targets, delays the replacement of ageing coal-fired power stations, and gives the Minister broad discretion over the state’s future generating mix – decisions experts say will undermine investor confidence and…

  • Agriculture Farming Rural
  • 08/12/2025
  • 23:11
Coeur Mining

Coeur Provides Palmarejo Exploration Update

2025 drilling further extends near-mine resources, returns multi-kilo silver grades at San Miguel and discovers new mineralization at East Palmarejo CHICAGO–BUSINESS WIRE– Coeur Mining,…

  • Contains:
  • Energy, Government Federal
  • 08/12/2025
  • 17:43
ACOSS

ACOSS supports end of energy rebate, need urgent measures to help those with the least

The government’s decision to not pursue a further round of energy bill rebates is the right call - but must be backed up with investment to reduce hardship for those most in need. “People on lower incomes urgently need relief, but these rebates were a short term, poorly targeted policy that failed to meaningfully help those who needed it,” said ACOSS CEO Cassandra Goldie. "We regularly hear from people who can't afford their gas and electricity bills because homes aren’t energy efficient, and their incomes are simply too low. “The government has spent $6.8 billion on energy bill rebates. For…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.