How agriPV can turn India’s farms into dual-purpose powerhouses


AgriPV (Agri-Photovoltaics): Turning India's Farms into Dual-Purpose Powerhouses

UPSC Integrated Study Note | GS-III | March 2026


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
2019 PM-KUSUM launched (March 2019) by Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE); seed of farm-solar integration. [S2]
2021 PM-KUSUM expanded; Component-A targeting 10,000 MW decentralised stilt-mounted solar plants — the earliest agriPV-adjacent provision. [S2]
2024 (Jan) PM-KUSUM scaled up; objectives reframed to include decarbonising the farm sector; >10 lakh standalone pumps installed by this point. [S2][S3]
2025 Ministerial push on Agri-Renewable Energy; over 20 lakh beneficiaries reached under PM-KUSUM. [S3]
2026 Budget PM-KUSUM allocation ~doubled to ₹5,000 crore; PM-KUSUM 2.0 roadmap with dedicated 10 GW Agri-PV component disclosed. [S1][S2]

Predecessors / Related Initiatives: - Jawaharlal Nehru National Solar Mission (JNNSM, 2010) — first large-scale solar push; utility-scale focus, no farm integration. - Kisan Urja Suraksha (KUSUM precursor) — Khelkar Committee recommendations on decentralised farm energy (2018). - Global precedent: Germany coined the term Agrivoltaik (1982, Goetzberger & Zastrow); Japan legislated solar sharing in 2013.


4. Core Static Facts

Definition & Variants:

Variant Description
Elevated systems Panels mounted several metres above ground; full crop row beneath.
Row-based systems Panels between crop rows; partial shading.
Greenhouse integration Semi-transparent panels replace greenhouse roofing.
Stilt-mounted Panels on stilts; tractors can operate below. [S1]

Implementing Framework:

Parameter Detail
Nodal Ministry Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE)
Scheme PM-KUSUM (Pradhan Mantri Kisan Urja Suraksha evam Utthaan Mahabhiyaan)
Launch year March 2019
Revised/Scaled January 2024
Central financial support ₹34,422 crore (total for PM-KUSUM to March 2026) [S2]
Budget 2026-27 allocation ₹5,000 crore (nearly 2× previous year) [S1]
Implementing agencies State Nodal Agencies (SNAs) + DISCOMs

PM-KUSUM Three Components:

Component Target
A — Decentralised ground/stilt-mounted solar plants 10,000 MW [S2]
B — Stand-alone solar agriculture pumps 14 lakh pumps [S2]
C — Solarisation of grid-connected agricultural pumps 35 lakh pumps [S2]

Key Numbers: - Aggregate PM-KUSUM solar capacity target: 34,800 MW by March 2026 [S2] - Beneficiaries reached: >20 lakh farmers [S3] - Standalone solar pumps installed: >10 lakh [S2] - Grid-connected pumps solarised: >13 lakh [S2] - Upcoming Agri-PV dedicated component (PM-KUSUM 2.0): 10 GW [S2] - India's overall solar target: 300 GW by 2030 [S1] - Net-zero commitment: 2070 (under Paris Agreement / COP26 Panchamrit) [S1]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Environmental

Social / Equity

Scientific / Technological

Administrative / Federal

Legal / Constitutional


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. PM-KUSUM stands for Pradhan Mantri Kisan Urja Suraksha evam Utthaan Mahabhiyaan. [S2]
  2. PM-KUSUM was launched in March 2019 by the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE). [S2]
  3. PM-KUSUM was scaled up in January 2024. [S2]
  4. PM-KUSUM's total central financial support (to March 2026): ₹34,422 crore. [S2]
  5. PM-KUSUM Budget 2026-27 allocation: ₹5,000 crore (approx. double the previous year). [S1]
  6. Component-A of PM-KUSUM targets 10,000 MW of decentralised solar plants; Component-B targets 14 lakh standalone solar pumps; Component-C targets 35 lakh grid-connected pumps. [S2]
  7. PM-KUSUM has reached over 20 lakh farmer beneficiaries. [S3]
  8. PM-KUSUM 2.0 to include a dedicated 10 GW Agri-PV component. [S2]
  9. India's solar capacity target: 300 GW by 2030; net-zero target: 2070. [S1]
  10. The term Agrivoltaik was coined in 1982 by German scientists Goetzberger and Zastrow.
  11. Japan legislated "solar sharing" (agriPV) in 2013 — an early national regulatory precedent.
  12. AgriPV does not involve land-use change from agriculture — panels are installed on the same agricultural parcel without converting it. [S1]
  13. The Parliamentary Estimates Committee reviewed an Agrivoltaics demonstration site at Issapur, Delhi. [S4]
  14. Shade-tolerant crops (spinach, lettuce, medicinal herbs) are better suited for agriPV systems than high-light crops like sunflower. [S1]
  15. Implementing agency for PM-KUSUM at state level: State Nodal Agencies (SNAs). [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping:

Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-III Infrastructure: Energy (renewable energy, energy security); Agriculture (farm income, technology in agriculture); Environment (climate change, sustainable development)
GS-II Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors; Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections
GS-I (tangential) Distribution of key natural resources

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "Agri-photovoltaics (AgriPV) has been described as a solution to India's land-versus-solar dilemma. Critically examine its potential and challenges in the Indian context, with reference to PM-KUSUM." (GS-III, 15 marks)

  2. "India's commitment to net-zero emissions by 2070 and food security are often seen as competing goals. How can dual-use technologies like AgriPV reconcile these objectives? Discuss with policy recommendations." (GS-III, 15 marks)

  3. "Examine the role of PM-KUSUM in transforming Indian farmers from energy consumers to energy producers. What structural reforms in the power sector are necessary to scale this transition?" (GS-II/GS-III, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
PM Surya Ghar: Muft Bijli Yojana Sister scheme reviewed alongside PM-KUSUM; covers rooftop solar for households; complementary to agriPV.
Green Hydrogen Mission Farm-based solar can feed electrolysers for green hydrogen; direct downstream policy link.
DISCOMS Financial Restructuring (RDSS scheme) DISCOM viability is the key bottleneck for feeder-level solarisation under PM-KUSUM.
India's NDCs and Panchamrit commitments agriPV contributes to 500 GW non-fossil capacity, 50% renewable energy share, and net-zero 2070 goals.
Land Acquisition Act, 2013 Utility-scale solar land conflict context; agriPV is the non-displacement alternative.
Electricity Act, 2003 & Amendments Legal basis for net metering, open access, and farmer feed-in tariffs — enables agriPV economics.
National Food Security Act, 2013 Food security imperatives that constrain conversion of agricultural land — precisely the constraint agriPV sidesteps.
Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY) Whether agriPV-integrated crops qualify for crop insurance is an evolving regulatory question.

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong ministry: Aspirants sometimes attribute PM-KUSUM to the Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers' Welfare. Correct: it is implemented by MNRE (with state agriculture departments as partners). [S2]

  2. Confusing PM-KUSUM with PM Surya Ghar: PM-KUSUM targets farmers / agricultural pumps / decentralised rural solar; PM Surya Ghar targets household rooftop solar. Both were reviewed together at Issapur, causing conflation. [S4]

  3. Land-use conversion assumption: AgriPV does not convert agricultural land to industrial/solar land — a critical legal and definitional distinction often confused in MCQs about "solar park" land acquisition controversies.

  4. Scale confusion: India's total solar target is 500 GW by 2030 (non-fossil energy capacity), of which solar is 300 GW. PM-KUSUM targets 34,800 MW (~35 GW) — a sub-component, not the whole target. Do not equate them.

  5. Subsidy figure: PM-KUSUM offers up to 70% subsidy on standalone solar pumps (Component-B). This is not uniform across all components — Component-A and C have different subsidy structures. Avoid generalising "70% subsidy" to the entire scheme. [S6]


11. Sources