SOLAR DAILY
Ten ways to ensure bees benefit from the solar power boom
by Staff Writers
Lancaster UK (SPX) Apr 26, 2021

Pollinators in a solar farm.

Researchers assessing the impact of solar energy development across Europe have come up with ten ways in which the expansion of solar can be shaped to ensure pollinators benefit.

Space-hungry solar photovoltaic (PV) is set to dominate future global electricity supply, but with careful decision making, efforts to secure clean energy need not come at the expense of biodiversity - particularly pollinators which are in sharp decline.

Bees, hoverflies, wasps, beetles, butterflies and moths play a key role in food production, with around 75% of the leading global food crops and 35% of global crop production relying on them to some extent.

Writing in the journal Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, a Lancaster-led team of environmental scientists systematically reviewed the available evidence on how land management practices relating to solar parks in North West Europe could enhance pollinator biodiversity.

Along with colleagues from the University of Reading, they highlighted ten evidence-based ways to protect and even enhance pollinator biodiversity ranging from sowing wildflowers to connecting solar parks to nearby areas of semi-natural habitat.

Their findings are timely as, in a bid to tackle climate change and reduce greenhouse gas emissions, more power is being generated from renewable sources - at the beginning of 2020 a record breaking 47% of the UK's electricity came from renewables, including wind, solar, hydro, wave and biomass.

Solar parks can produce large amounts of power, with the UK's largest solar park set to power 91,000 homes once complete. But, solar parks also take up land, with potential impacts on the environment. In the UK approximately half of PV has been installed as ground-mounted solar parks, ranging in size from 1-40 hectares.

Shading caused by rows of solar panels affects air temperature, rainfall and evaporation which has a knock on effect on soil, vegetation and biodiversity.

However, in the UK solar parks are often built in intensively managed agricultural landscapes and thus are poor for biodiversity. In this scenario, solar parks may in fact provide opportunities to establish hotspots of pollinator biodiversity which in turn can help pollinate local crops such as oilseed, strawberries and apples.

Lancaster University's Hollie Blaydes said: "Many pollinators are in decline both in the UK and in other parts of the world. Actions to conserve pollinators include reversing agricultural intensification and maintaining natural habitat, both of which can be achieved within solar parks. Often built amongst agricultural land, solar parks offer a unique opportunity to provide pollinator resources where they are most needed."

Prof Simon Potts, University of Reading, said: "As well as promoting biodiversity, pollinator-friendly solar parks also have the potential to provide tangible economic benefits to farmers through enhancing pollination services to adjacent agricultural land, boosting crop yields.

"Imagine a world where solar parks not only produced much needed low carbon electricity but were also diverse and attractive wildflower meadows buzzing with insect life."

Dr Alona Armstrong, Lancaster University Environment Centre said: "Land use change for solar parks could cause further degradation of our environment but, if done well, offers much potential to improve our environment. If we transition well, we could use energy system decarbonisation to also address the ecological crisis. Given where we are, can we afford not to?"

Research paper


Related Links
Lancaster University
All About Solar Energy at SolarDaily.com

SOLAR DAILY
SolAero Technologies' Ingenuity on Mars
Albuquerque NM (SPX) Apr 21, 2021
SolAero Technologies, a leading provider of high efficiency solar cells composite structural products for satellite and aerospace applications, congratulates the team at NASA's Jet Propulsion Labs (JPL) on the successful maiden flight of the Mars Helicopter, Ingenuity. SolAero is proud to have supplied the solar panel that has enabled the first powered, controlled flight on another planet. The solar panel for Ingenuity was manufactured in SolAero's state-of-the-art production facility in Albuquerq ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

SOLAR DAILY
Greece to lend Patriot battery to Saudi as Huthi attacks spike

Missile Warning Satellite Delivered to Cape Canaveral

Lockheed Martin awarded $3.7B to modernize key missile defense mission

Lockheed, Northrop to compete for Next Generation Interceptor program

SOLAR DAILY
Explosion at Israeli rocket factory a controlled test

Pentagon Will Attempt Hypersonic Missile Shootdown Using US Navy's SM-6 Missile

SeaRAM missile launched from littoral combat ship USS Charleston in exercise

Air Force's hypersonic missile booster fails to launch from B-52 in first test

SOLAR DAILY
DLR develops an unmanned stratospheric aircraft

Skydweller Aero validates initial flight hardware and autopilot software

Navy exercise tests unmanned vessels, aircraft

MQ-9 Reaper improvements expected to extend service life

SOLAR DAILY
Japan-Germany international joint experiment on space optical communication

Parsons awarded $250M Seabed-to-Space ISR contract

Air Force exercises push data integration from across military domains

Airbus, Fujitsu and Thales in team up for UK army future tactical communication program

SOLAR DAILY
BAE, Oshkosh to build prototype cold-weather vehicles for U.S. Army

Marines to begin testing, evaluating new physical training uniforms

Marine Corps commandant to testify before Congress on training fatalities

U.S. military readiness has 'degraded' over last two decades

SOLAR DAILY
Lockheed Martin And Thales Australia team up to make weapons locally

Guterres and Ban Ki-moon call for ASEAN to act on Myanmar

Senators seek to boost military spending on quantum computing

EU set to expand Myanmar sanctions to military-linked firms

SOLAR DAILY
NATO fighter jets scramble to intercept Russian aircraft over Baltic Sea

Five key points from Putin's state of the nation speech

Cooperate despite 'genocide'? Biden tests ties with China, Russia

Philippines' Duterte prepared to deploy navy over South China Sea claim

SOLAR DAILY
Scientists use DNA technology to build tough 3D nanomaterials

New "metalens" shifts focus without tilting or moving

Nanowire could provide a stable, easy-to-make superconducting transistor