Agrivoltaics in Southern California
Placing solar arrays over crops creates multiple benefits for farmers, communities, and the planet.
![agrivoltaics](/sites/default/files/styles/1380x831/public/2024-06/pexels-tom-fisk-solar-panels-951x1024.jpg?h=39d08be6&itok=VLvQ6tUm)
Read about the Robert Redford Conservancy's project on agrivoltaics — a first for Southern California.
of California's farmland can produce energy, save water, and grow food
Agrivoltaics in Action
![A student collects eggs in the student garden](/sites/default/files/styles/728x939/public/2024-07/eggs-pitzer-garden.jpg?h=65f1ba08&itok=8pL1xmWC)
Strategic collaboration with multiple partners amplifies the regenerative agriculture work of Pitzer College
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Partners include Climate Resolve, American Farmland Trust, IERCD, The Nature Conservancy, Pomona College, Cal Poly Pomona's Spadra Farm, and GRID Alternatives, a community-oriented nonprofit solar company. This study is funded by the Foundation for Food and Agriculture Research. Our curriculum is funded by US Bank.
![Annie Voss](/sites/default/files/styles/728x939/public/2024-10/Annie-Voss-Web-9-10-Cropped.jpg?h=5e563226&itok=2ocKvJ81)
Annie Voss is from a farm family in Ohio and is using her role as a Redford Conservancy Fellow to help build a curriculum for agrivoltaics.
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Pitzer's Robert Redford Conservancy's workforce development agrivoltaics curriculum will be the first of its kind in the United States.
![silhouette of a man looking into the sunset](/sites/default/files/styles/728x939/public/2024-06/silhouette-with-sunset-1-1024x681-1.jpeg?h=6c164466&itok=X9dZa3xg)
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Climate change is hitting our farm communities hard. Agrivoltaics can improve labor conditions, and allow crops to survive a hotter, drier climate.