Renewables

Swiss Insolight testing translucent solar modules to boost crop yield

insolight-agrivoltaic-solar

Photo: Insolight

Published

July 7, 2021

Country

Comments

comments icon

0

Share

Published:

July 7, 2021

Country:

Comments:

comments icon

0

Share

Swiss solar tech startup Insolight has developed translucent solar modules that can help improve crop yield by adjusting the amount of light that reaches the plants, while using the rest of the sunlight to generate electricity.

Insolight said the agrivoltaic solution, called insolagrin, will be tested in cooperation with energy company Romande Energie and agricultural research firm Agroscope over four years starting this month, when the solar modules will be installed over strawberry and raspberry crops as replacements for protective tunnels.

The insolagrin modules act like a ‘smart’ shade, adjusting the amount of light they let through

The solar modules act like a “smart” shade, adjusting the amount of light they let through and enabling the optimization of plant photosynthesis over the seasons and helping reduce the negative impact of hot summer temperatures on the yield and quality of agricultural products, Insolight said.

A positive outcome of the pilot project could lead to large-scale deployment

The modules, called THEIA (Translucency & High Efficiency in Agrivoltaics), will be tested over a surface area of 165 m2, but positive results could lead to future large-scale deployments.

The pilot project is supported by the Swiss Federal Office of Energy (OFEN), according to the press release. Martial Genolet, photovoltaic business manager at Romande Energie, said the replacing existing greenhouses with PV structures would complement rooftop solar deployment, which would speed up the decarbonization process in Switzerland.

Comments (0)

Be the first one to comment on this article.

Enter Your Comment
Please wait... Please fill in the required fields. There seems to be an error, please refresh the page and try again. Your comment has been sent.

Related Articles

croatia hep koncar hpp varazdin contract

Croatia’s HEP to invest EUR 157 million in HPP Varaždin

19 January 2026 - HEP and Končar have signed a contract for the reconstruction of the generating units at the Varaždin hydropower plant

IRENA Global daily flexibility needs are quadrupling by 2050

IRENA: Global daily flexibility needs are quadrupling by 2050

19 January 2026 - IRENA expects the world's electricity system flexibility needs, on a daily timescale, to quadruple by 2050 from the 2019 level

Bulgaria host renewable electricity plants on Luxembourg s behalf

Bulgaria to host renewable electricity plants on Luxembourg’s behalf

16 January 2026 - Bulgaria joined Finland as a host country for renewables projects funded by Luxembourg, under the RENEWFM program for 2026

Renewables account 99 Turkey net electricity capacity additions

Renewables account for 99% of Turkey’s net electricity capacity additions

16 January 2026 - Electricity capacity in Turkey reached 122 GW in 2025, of which 62% was from renewables, according to the SHURA Energy Transition Center