Agrivoltaics in Southern California

Placing solar arrays over crops creates multiple benefits for farmers, communities, and the planet.

agrivoltaics

Read about the Robert Redford Conservancy's project on agrivoltaics — a first for Southern California.

10M Acres

of California's farmland can produce energy, save water, and grow food

Agrivoltaics in Action

A student collects eggs in the student garden

Strategic collaboration with multiple partners amplifies the regenerative agriculture work of Pitzer College

Powered by Partners

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

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.

Powered by Students

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

Powered by the Sun

Climate change is hitting our farm communities hard. Agrivoltaics can improve labor conditions, and allow crops to survive a hotter, drier climate.