Weatherwatch: solar farms with added food

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Weatherwatch: solar farms with added food

Written by Paul Brown

New panels harvest blue and green light for electricity, letting red light through to crops below

With solar farms in the sunny south of England now being economically viable without subsidy there is disquiet in the shires about them changing the character of the countryside. On less good quality land most solar farms now include grazing for sheep and wildflower areas as part of their proposals to counter the criticism that the black panels are creating an industrial landscape.

Now British scientists have come up with a better alternative: semi-transparent solar panels that allow crops to be grown underneath. The tinted panels harvest the blue and green light to make electricity, allowing the redder light to pass through to enable the crops to grow. The two trial crops, basil and spinach, grew successfully and, although the yield was down, the electricity plus the green produce made greater profits than normal farming.

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Bury the Trash

Member
Mixed Farmer
its rampant house building and consequential infrastructure, roads etc that is changing the character of the countryside, permanently.
Thankyou.
 

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