Kapiti News

Adding sunshine to the farming mix

Trial to monitor how sheep and solar panels co-exist

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Anew Massey University study will explore the potential for combined solar and pastoral farming in New Zealand by grazing sheep around solar panels on a Taranaki farm.

For New Zealand to reduce its carbon emissions, there needs to be an increase in the production of sustainabl­e and renewable energy sources, and solar energy is one means to help achieve this.

Solar energy can be produced on solar farms, as undertaken elsewhere in the world, but a downside of this has been the conversion of previously productive farmland. There is scope for synergies in the New Zealand

context, with solar farming coexisting with sheep grazing under and around the solar panels/arrays, providing two sources of income per unit of land area. For this to be feasible, knowledge of pasture production and quality below and around solar panels/arrays is required.

Massey University, with funding from the Agricultur­al and Marketing Research and Developmen­t Trust, aims to answer these questions on a solar farm in Taranaki.

The team, led by Professors Danny Donaghy and Paul Kenyon from Massey’s School of Agricultur­e and Environmen­t, will measure pasture compositio­n, growth and quality around and under solar arrays.

“Solar farming in conjunctio­n with sheep grazing is an exciting mixed system allowing farmers to obtain two income streams while ensuring the land area is still productive,” Kenyon says.

The study will provide data on pasture production and quality, which can then be used to model sheep carrying capacity or various sheep systems (i.e. a traditiona­l ewe/ lamb system versus an all-year-round lamb finishing system). Using this informatio­n, economic analysis can be undertaken to determine the income potential of both solar energy production and sheep productivi­ty on a per hectare basis. Sheep are the likely animal of choice due to the potential for larger livestock to damage solar arrays.

“Due to the structure of the arrays, the amount of shading and light each area of land receives will differ each day and across seasons. Therefore, it is important that within a solar farm all these areas are measured across seasons to allow for a total picture of pasture production and therefore animal carrying capacity,” Kenyon says.

There is also potential for shading,

Solar farming in conjunctio­n with sheep grazing is an exciting mixed system allowing farmers to obtain two income streams while ensuring the land area is still productive. Prof Paul Kenyon, Massey University School of Agricultur­e

especially at more humid times, to result in fungal growth and for potential health issues such as facial eczema to become an issue, so this will also be monitored.

Shading may result in species changes, with the potential for weed species to become prevalent, and even dominant. This is also being monitored, as the level of weed species will impact pasture production as well as quality, both which have an influence on sheep carrying capacity and performanc­e.

Initial results from the study will be available in a year’s time.

 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? Solar panels on the farm in Taranaki where the trial is taking place.
Photo / Supplied Solar panels on the farm in Taranaki where the trial is taking place.

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