Jülich Expertise Fuels New Agri-Photovoltaic Plant in Rhenish Mines

Forschungszentrum Juelich

6 September 2023

Solar power and agriculture in one field - RWE and Forschungszentrum Jülich want to demonstrate how this can work in a demonstration plant in the Rhenish mining district. Earlier today RWE officially launched the project in the presence of Frank Rock, Rhine-Erft County Commissioner, Sascha Solbach, Mayor of the City of Bedburg, and Prof Ulrich Schurr, Director of the Institute for Plant Sciences at Forschungszentrum Jülich.

RWE started construction of the agrivoltaics (Agri-PV) plant for generating solar power while simultaneously using the land for agricultural and horticultural purposes on about seven hectares of recultivated land at the edge of the Garzweiler opencast lignite mine. The research project is funded by the state of North Rhine-Westphalia through the progres.nrw programme for climate protection and the energy transition. The demonstration plant will have a peak capacity of 3.2 megawatts (the equivalent of around 2.5 MWac) and is to be commissioned by the end of this year. At the start of 2024, research activities lasting at least five years are to begin.

The project is aimed at testing suitable cultivation methods and value-adding strategies for operators of Agri-PV plants. Forschungszentrum Jülich contributes its scientific expertise in combining plant research and photovoltaics - including within the context of the bioeconomy. In addition to recultivated land, RWE has long-standing connections with regional farmers and is providing the extensive technical expertise it has gained from the development, construction and operation of solar plants worldwide.

One location, three technical concepts

Three different technical Agri-PV concepts are planned for the demonstration plant, all allowing the simultaneous use of the land for electricity generation as well as agricultural and horticultural production. The first system by Next2Sun uses a vertical design with the solar modules installed rigidly on the substructure. Enough space is left for harvesting machinery between the module rows allowing for the agricultural use of the land to be tested. In the second system by Schletter the modules are installed in rows as well, but they are mounted on a movable axis and follow the course of the sun from east to west.

Jülich expertise for new agri-photovoltaic plant in the Rhenish mining area
Graphic representation of the three technical concepts of the new demonstration plant in Bedburg
Copyright:
- RWE

This should optimise energy yields from the PV system and leave land available for simultaneous agricultural use. In the third system by Zimmermann PV-Stahlbau the PV modules are elevated on a high pergola-like substructure allowing for crops such as raspberries or blueberries to be cultivated below them.

Prof. Ulrich Schurr, Director of the Institute for Plant Sciences at Forschungszentrum Jülich and Founder of the BioökonomieREVIER initiative, says: "Agri-PV holds enormous potential for the energy transition in Germany and the Rhenish mining district. In the demonstration plant we can now use land for generating energy and growing agricultural crops simultaneously. The solar modules can even benefit the plants - by protecting them from too much sunlight, hailstorms or frost and by controlling crop irrigation. In this way crop failures can be prevented and yields can even be increased. RWE's demonstration plant enables us to test innovative technologies that are particularly relevant for agriculture in the Rhenish mining district and extends the approach from the research facility in Morschenich- Alt on land use with practical relevance."

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