India's Energy and Agricultural Challenge
The West Asia crisis has highlighted India's heavy reliance on imported fossil fuels, which presents substantial macroeconomic and strategic risks. Alongside energy insecurity, climate change poses a growing threat to agricultural livelihoods, especially with a forecasted strong El Niño in 2026. Addressing these concerns requires not only securing India's energy future but also enhancing income resilience for farmers, who make up 43% of the workforce.
Renewable Energy Initiatives
- Renewable Energy Capacity: As of March 2026, India’s renewable energy capacity reached approximately 274 GW, with solar energy exceeding 150 GW.
- Current Models: The existing solar models include large solar parks and the PM Surya Ghar; however, these are insufficient for agricultural transformation.
Agriphotovoltaics (Agri-PV)
Agri-PV combines solar power generation with crop cultivation on the same land, allowing farmers to harvest both sunlight and crops. Solar panels are elevated to enable cultivation beneath them, providing dual income streams.
- Income Stability: Unlike agricultural income, which is susceptible to weather, pests, and market fluctuations, solar income remains stable, acting as a "third crop."
- Pilot Project: A 600 KW solar plant in Rajasthan, supported by ICRIER and Kotak Mahindra Bank, demonstrated a tenfold increase in farmer income.
Impact on Power Sector
- Current Subsidies: Agriculture consumes approximately 2,60,000 GWh of electricity annually, receiving tariffs far below the actual cost, leading to significant subsidies.
- Agri-PV Potential: By generating electricity at farm level, Agri-PV can reduce transmission losses and infrastructure costs, transforming farmers into clean energy producers.
Policy Recommendations
- Supportive Policies: Elevated Agri-PV structures are more expensive, necessitating supportive policies like differentiated feed-in tariffs and targeted PM-KUSUM support to enhance project viability.
- Financial Viability: Even a feed-in tariff of Rs 4.5/kWh can significantly reduce subsidy burdens and create new income sources for farmers.
- Institutional Innovation: Solar cooperatives, akin to milk cooperatives, can aggregate smallholders, improve financing access, and collectively manage power sales.
Global Implications
If prioritized by PM Modi, the Agri-PV initiative could transform not only India's growth story but also set a precedent for the Global South, promoting the concept of “One Sun, One Earth, and One Grid,” thereby reducing reliance on fossil fuels and boosting farmers' incomes.