Back to Search Start Over

Agricultural sustainability estimation of the European photovoltaic greenhouses.

Authors :
Cossu, Marco
Yano, Akira
Solinas, Stefania
Deligios, Paola A.
Tiloca, Maria Teresa
Cossu, Andrea
Ledda, Luigi
Source :
European Journal of Agronomy. Aug2020, Vol. 118, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

• The yield inside PV greenhouses was estimated on 14 species. • The evaluation identified the suitable crops inside four PV greenhouse types. • A PV cover ratio of 25% is compatible to all crops, with limited yield reduction. • A PV cover ratio of 50% is sustainable to medium and low light demanding crops. • Structures with 100% PV cover support only crops with optimal DLI < 10 mol m−2 d−1. The integration of the photovoltaic (PV) energy in the greenhouse farm has raised concerns on the agricultural sustainability of this specific agrosystem in terms of crop planning and management, due to the shading cast by the PV panels on the canopy. The PV greenhouse (PVG) can be classified on the basis of the PV cover ratio (PV R), that is the ratio of the projected area of PV panels to the ground and the total greenhouse area. In this paper, we estimated the yield of 14 greenhouse horticultural and floricultural crops inside four commercial PVG types spread in southern Europe, with PV R ranging from 25 to 100%. The aim of the work is to identify the PVG types suitable for the cultivation of the considered species, based on the best trade-off between PV shading and crop production. The daily light integral (DLI) was used to compare the light scenarios inside the PVGs to the crop light requirements, and estimate the potential yield. The structures with a PV R of 25% were compatible with the cultivation of all considered species, including the high light demanding ones (tomato, cucumber, sweet pepper), with an estimated negligible or limited yield reduction (below 25%). The medium light species (such as asparagus) with an optimal DLI lower than 17 mol m−2 d−1 and low light crops can be cultivated inside PVGs with a PV R up to 60%. Only low light demanding floricultural species with an optimal DLI lower than 10 mol m−2 d−1, such as poinsettia, kalanchoe and dracaena, were compatible inside PVGs with a PV R up to 100%. Innovative cropping systems should be considered to overcome the penalizing light scenarios of the PVGs with high PV R , also implementing LED supplementary lighting. This paper contributes to identify the sustainable PVG types for the chosen species and the alternative crop managements in terms of transplantation period and precision agriculture techniques, aimed at increasing the crop productivity and adaptability inside the PVG agrosystems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
11610301
Volume :
118
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
European Journal of Agronomy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
143554793
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eja.2020.126074