India has approx 140 million farming households. Most of them face two existential pressures at once, such as reducing agricultural margins and rising energy costs. The cost of crops has not increased over the last five years, and inflation is at its peak. Agrivoltaics is the practice of co-locating solar panels and crop cultivation on the same land and is a rare solution that addresses both with a single infrastructure investment.Agrivoltaics allows farmers to increase their income potential and doubles their earnings by adopting agriPV plants. AgriPV systems are already operational across India, Europe, East Asia, the United States, and across the world. Pilot projects have demonstrated income increases of over 168%, water savings of up to 30%, and land productivity ratios more than 60% higher than running solar and farming separately. So, let us discuss agrivoltaics in detail and understand how it is changing the future of farming.
What is Agrivoltaics Farming?
Agrivoltaics is a dual-use system where solar panels are installed in a way that allows farming activities to continue underneath or alongside them. The panels are either elevated at a sufficient height or spaced strategically to ensure that sunlight, machinery movement, and crop growth are not significantly restricted. This system introduces solar power as a third crop for farmers, alongside traditional agriculture. This means farmers generate income from crops year-round and also earn from electricity generation. Overall, their income will increase significantly.What are the Advantages of Agrivoltaic Farming?
Agrivoltaics does not just give farmers a little extra money, but it changes how a farm works from the ground up. Here are the six biggest advantages of argivoltaics farming:
Stable Income Opportunities for Farmers
Agrivoltaics farming enables two sources of income for the farmers. First, what they sell from the field, and second, the electricity their solar panels produce. Usually, crop income can go up and down with the weather, but solar power keeps generating money every single day, irrespective of rain or shine. This two-income setup gives farmers a financial safety net they never had before. In many cases, total income per acre can go up sharply compared to farming alone.Less Water Required & Lower Irrigation Costs
The agrivoltaics solar panels create shade on the soil below. This shade means less water evaporates from the ground and less moisture is lost from plants. This makes the soil stay wet for a long time, and farmers do not need to water their crops so often. In dry areas, this alone can improve water efficiency by up to 30%. For farmers who have limited water, it is very effective, and it also requires less money spent on irrigation every season.Crops Stay Safer in Bad Weather
Solar panels above the crops act as a protective roof. This physical cover reduces crop damage from too much heat, which can dry out and burn young plants. It also protects from heavy rain that flattens crops and washes away nutrients from the soil. Apart from these, panels work as a protective shield from hailstorms that can destroy an entire crop in minutes. Weather-related losses are a major concern for farmers these days. Extreme weather conditions can wipe out the entire crop and the farmer’s whole income. So, fewer whether specific losses mean fewer seasons where the farmer walks away with nothing.Better Use of Limited Land
In India, we have limited land available, and we cannot compromise farming for solar. Most farmers do not have the option to dedicate acres to solar alone. In agrivoltaics, the same land does both jobs simultaneously. The land can feed a family and generate electricity at the same time.Lower Farming Costs
Running diesel pumps for irrigation is one of the highest recurring costs for Indian farmers. When solar panels on the farm power the pumps directly, that diesel bill disappears. Farmers who switch to solar-powered irrigation save ₹5,000 to ₹6,500 per acre every year for the next 25 years.Good for the Environment and for Future Harvests
Agrivoltaics supports healthier farming for the long term, such as solar energy replacing diesel, and cutting down harmful carbon emissions. Its shade and moisture retention help keep the soil healthy and alive for the long term, and the panel covers stop soil from being washed or blown away over time.How Does Agrivoltaic Farming Work?
Agrivoltaics works through a combination of engineering design and agricultural planning. It is not simply about installing solar panels on farmland.
Structural Design and Layout Planning
The system begins with careful structural design, where solar panels are either elevated above the ground or installed between crop rows. This ensures that essential farming activities such as ploughing, sowing, irrigation, and harvesting can continue without disruption. The height of the panels, their spacing, and orientation are all planned to maintain accessibility while optimising solar energy generation. In some cases, tracking systems are used to adjust panel angles throughout the day, which helps manage both energy output and the distribution of shade across the field.Light Management and Microclimate Creation
Instead of blocking sunlight completely, agrivoltaic systems create a filtered light environment. This partial shading reduces the intensity of direct solar radiation, which helps crops avoid heat stress during peak daytime temperatures. At the same time, the shaded ground retains moisture for longer periods to reduce evaporation and improve water efficiency. These conditions create a more stable microclimate where temperature and humidity fluctuations are moderated to support healthier and more consistent crop growth.Crop Selection and Compatibility
Crop selection is aligned with the light conditions created by the solar setup. Shade-tolerant crops such as leafy greens, herbs, and certain vegetables often perform well under partial shading, which benefits from reduced heat stress and improved moisture retention. Crops that require higher sunlight exposure can still be cultivated by adjusting the spacing between panel rows or modifying the system layout. This adaptability allows farmers to plan cropping patterns based on seasonal variations and local climatic conditions.Integration of Energy into Farm Operations
The electricity generated within an agrivoltaic system is not limited to grid supply but is actively used within the farm itself. Solar energy can power irrigation systems, reducing reliance on diesel and ensuring consistent water availability. It can also support cold storage and processing units, helping minimise post-harvest losses and improving overall efficiency. Agrivoltaic farming works as a unified model where engineering design and agricultural planning come together to enhance both energy production and crop performance on the same land.Uses of Agrivoltaic Farming
Agrivoltaics is not a one-size-fits-all system. It is being used across many different types of farming, each in its own way. Here are the six main ways farmers and developers are putting it to work today.
Growing Crops Under Elevated Solar Panels
This is how most agrivoltaic farms are set up. Panels are fixed on frames well above the field, and food crops grow in the space below. The shade that the panels provide suits a wide range of crops, such as turmeric and ginger in Madhya Pradesh, ragi and brinjal in Karnataka, and onions and tomatoes across Maharashtra. Moreover, the sunlight-dependent crops like wheat are planted in the open corridors between panel rows, where full sunlight still reaches the ground.Livestock Farming and Grazing Alongside Solar Panels
Cattle, goats, and sheep can graze on land that also has solar panels installed above. The animals benefit directly from the shade, which lowers heat stress during hot months and keeps them calmer and healthier. Fodder grasses and pasture crops grow steadily in the partial shade below the panels. Meanwhile, animals grazing between the panels naturally control weed growth, which reduces unnecessary maintenance work for the farmer. This combination of animal welfare, feed production, stable income, and solar generation from the same land is gaining interest across dry and semi-arid farming regions.Fruit and Orchard Farming
Fruit trees like guava and lemon are a natural fit for elevated agrivoltaic panels. These trees grow well under partial shade and do not require the same machinery access that annual crops demand. Once established, an agrivoltaic orchard requires low maintenance, the trees grow steadily under the panels, the panels produce power consistently, and the farmer’s involvement focuses mainly on harvest and routine upkeep.Solar-Integrated Greenhouse Farming
In agrivoltaics farming, solar panels form part of the greenhouse structure, either as the roof or as side panels. The greenhouse continues to function as a protected growing environment for the crops inside, while the panels generate electricity from the sunlight they capture. This works particularly well for high-value crops like flowers, herbs, vegetables, and certain other crops that already require a controlled environment. The farmer benefits from both the crop inside and the electricity sold outside.Running Farm Operations on Solar Power
The electricity produced by agrivoltaic panels does not just go to the grid. The farm itself can consume most of the electricity. Irrigation pumps, cold storage units, food processing equipment, and chaff cutters can all run on this power. This reduces dependence on diesel and cuts monthly electricity bills significantly.Solar-Powered Water Extraction and Irrigation
In many parts of India, the cost and availability of water are the single biggest concern for farming. Agrivoltaic farming addresses this from two sides at once. Solar panels power the pumps that lift water from bore wells or canals to eliminate diesel costs. At the same time, the shade from the panels reduces how quickly water evaporates from the soil, which means less water is needed overall. Together, these two effects can make a meaningful difference to a farmer’s water bill, especially in drought-prone districts.Supporting Soil Health and Biodiversity
Agrivoltaic farms can be designed to actively improve the surrounding farm environment. Wildflower strips between panel rows attract bees and pollinators, which improve crop yields across the farm. Panel rows oriented against the prevailing wind direction act as windbreaks that protect topsoil from erosion. Over several growing seasons, these effects accumulate, and the land becomes progressively more productive.Where is Agrivoltaics Going in India Over the Next 10 Years?
Agrivoltaics in India is at an early but clearly accelerating stage. Understanding where it is headed helps a farmer decide whether to move now or wait.Indian Engineering is Catching Up to Indian Conditions
The first AgriPV systems deployed in India were largely adapted from European designs, which were built for different soil types, different wind patterns, and different rainfall. Over the past few years, IIT-led engineering teams have been developing India-specific structural standards that account for monsoon wind loads, expansive clay soils in central India, seismic zones in the west and south, and the specific corrosion conditions of coastal regions. This means the systems being installed today are better suited to Indian farms than those installed five years ago, and the systems being installed five years from now will be better still.The Range of Crops and Farm Types is Expanding
Early Indian pilots focused primarily on a handful of shade-tolerant crops. As more data comes in from working farms, the list of compatible varieties and farming systems is growing. Floriculture farms, fish ponds with floating solar, dairy farms with solar-powered cooling, and spice cultivation operations are all now being explored as agrivoltaic applications. Cold chain infrastructure powered by on-farm solar, which directly addresses India’s massive post-harvest loss problem, is emerging as one of the most impactful near-term applications.Policy is Moving from Awareness to Active Support
Three years ago, agrivoltaics was barely mentioned in Indian agricultural policy documents. Today, it has a dedicated 10 GW target in the upcoming PM-KUSUM 2.0, a national alliance coordinating standards and research, and active policy discussions around the land classification reforms needed to protect farmers’ legal status when they install solar. State governments in Maharashtra, Gujarat, Karnataka, and others have launched schemes that build the financial and grid infrastructure that agrivoltaic farms need. The direction is clear, even if the pace is uneven.The Economics Will Improve as The Scale Increases
One of the biggest barriers today is the high upfront cost of elevated AgriPV structures, which is 20 to 40% more than conventional ground-mounted solar. As more installations happen, manufacturing volumes for the specialised components increase, supply chains mature, and installation teams gain experience. Costs will come down. Farmers who participate in early government-subsidised pilot programmes today will be ahead of the curve when agrivoltaics becomes mainstream, and better positioned to advise others, access follow-on support, and benefit from improved designs as they arrive.The Challenges to Agrivoltaic Farming
