Geographical

Solar meadows

Combining solar farms with biodiversi­tyboosting plants could result in a win–win situation for the environmen­t

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Solar farms offer one way to meet the world’s decarbonis­ation targets, but they could also be used to tackle another of the planet’s big problems: loss of biodiversi­ty. The approach is starting to take off. Residents of Barnsdale, for example, will soon play host to a new solar-panel farm lined with meadows of wildflower­s and native grasses, which Banks Group, the developer, says will boost pollinatin­g insects. The idea stems from the confluence of two long-term trends: declining numbers of pollinatin­g insects and the growing amount of land allocated to solar farms. According to the Center for Biological Diversity in Arizona, more than 40 per cent of insect pollinator­s globally are listed as ‘highly threatened’ – an issue that could seriously threaten food security. Meanwhile, solar-energy capacity has been increasing. In the UK, solar capacity increased from 5,489 MW in 2014 to 13,529 MW in 2019. According to Greenmatch – a renewable energy comparator – the UK will drive this figure up to 15,675 MW by 2023.

Early forms of pollinator-friendly solar farms first arose in Europe and have now gained traction in the

USA, where six states in the Midwest and along the east coast have adopted legislatio­n that allows solar sites to be officially designated ‘pollinator-friendly’. MCE – a solar provider in California – announced in 2020 that pollinator habitats will be mandatory across all of its new solar projects.

Given the amount of land needed for solar farms, the idea of making the space between and beneath panels amenable to pollinator­s seems intuitive. One 2021 study, published in the journal Nature, estimated that if solar energy were to account for 25–80 per cent of the electricit­y mix by 2050, 0.5–2.8 per cent of the EU’s total land mass would be needed for solar generation. Matthew O’Neal, a professor of entomology at Iowa State University, would like to see more solar developers seize this opportunit­y. ‘Currently, Indiana has at least 15 planned solar energy farms in developmen­t, each projected to cover more than 1,000 acres [405 hectares]. One is planned to cover 4,500 acres,’ he says. ‘If planted with pollinator habitat, this one developmen­t would provide almost as much habitat specifical­ly for pollinator­s as the entire state’s CP42 enrolment [the USDA Conservati­on Reserve Program’s pollinator-conservati­on initiative].’

The benefits of such projects don’t stop at the insects. Research from Yale’s Center for Business and the Environmen­t demonstrat­es that pollinator-friendly

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