Andhra Pradesh Poised to Lead India in Agrivoltaics with 2030 Mission

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Representational image. Credit: Canva

With agriculture consuming over 30% of Andhra Pradeshโ€™s electricity, the state is exploring agrivoltaics as a solution to ease the mounting subsidy burden on power utilities while boosting farmer incomes.

A new blueprint, โ€œPotential of Agrivoltaics in Andhra Pradesh: Conducive Regulatory Framework and Off-Taker Analysisโ€, highlights how the state could become Indiaโ€™s demonstration hub for dual land use through an Agrivoltaics Mission 2030, targeting 500 MW of installed capacity.

Policy and Energy Context

Andhra Pradeshโ€™s agriculture sector currently accounts for nearly 18,000 million units of power annually, creating a โ‚น10,500 crore subsidy liability for distribution companies. By combining crop cultivation with solar power generation, agrivoltaics offers a pathway to reduce costs while ensuring reliable daytime supply.

The stateโ€™s Integrated Clean Energy Policy 2024 and Natural Farming Mission, which involves six million farmers, provide a strong foundation to launch such a mission.

Land and Farmer Benefits

With 14.7% of land classified as wasteland and nearly 49.55 lakh hectares under cultivation, Andhra Pradesh has significant potential for dual-use development. According to the study, farmers stand to earn โ‚น40,000โ€“โ‚น50,000 per acre annually through leasing their land for projects. Under developer or farmer-producer organization models, revenues could reach โ‚น15โ€“18 lakh per MW each year.

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Industry and Developer Concerns

Developers note that agrivoltaic structures involve a 20% higher capital expenditure than conventional ground-mounted solar plants. Experts stress the need for tariff clarity and CAPEX benchmarks to ensure bankability and attract investment.

The SAMPADA Framework

The report proposes the SAMPADA frameworkโ€”Statutory recognition, Agricultural land flexibility, Mobilising finance, Pathways for alternate off-take, Assigning responsibilities, Development strategy, and Alignment at institutional levelโ€”to guide regulatory and financial reforms.

National Implications

If implemented, Andhra Pradesh could emerge as a national leader in energy-agriculture convergence, balancing food and energy security while advancing Indiaโ€™s clean energy transition.


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