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MSU students design solutions for innovative, multi-purpose solar farms

MSU students design solutions for innovative, multi-purpose solar farms

Contact: Meg Henderson

From left to right, Adam Overfield, senior vice president, Cubico Sustainable Investments; William Stark, MSU agronomy graduate student; Jay McCurdy, associate professor in agronomy and turfgrass, and Yago Cavenagh, associate, Cubico Sustainable Investments.
From left to right, Adam Overfield, senior vice president, Cubico Sustainable Investments; William Stark, MSU agronomy graduate student; Jay McCurdy, associate professor in agronomy and turfgrass, and Yago Cavenagh, associate, Cubico Sustainable Investments. (Photo by Dominique Belcher)

STARKVILLE, Miss.鈥敾ㄐ阒辈 State students are gaining real-world experience solving problems in the solar energy industry through a team challenge sponsored by Cubico Sustainable Investments.

As part of its corporate responsibility program, Cubico, a global renewable energy infrastructure company owning and operating large-scale solar farms, created a recent competition for MSU College of Agriculture and Life Sciences students to design potential agrivoltaics solutions to control vegetation on solar farms with diverse landscapes.

Agrivoltaics is the practice of using land for both agriculture and solar energy production, and according to the USDA, the need for this complementary land use will only increase as the federal government works to meet its target of a zero-emissions economy by 2050.

Plant and soil sciences graduate student William Stark of Pearl River, Louisiana, led the winning student team whose proposal involves management of low-maintenance turf grass species based on USDA climate zones and characteristics suitable for growing among solar panels, such as heat and shade tolerance, height and seed supply, and cost and maintenance. Stark also recently earned an MSU bachelor鈥檚 degree in agronomy.

Other team members included agronomy undergraduates Charles Brooks of Greenwood; Garrett Gray of Baldwyn; Brandon Herring of Southaven; Jack Rial of Brandon; Tucker Smith of Franklin, Tennessee; Edward Wilson of Starkville; and Jacob Youngblood of Northport, Alabama. Associate Professor of Agronomy Jay McCurdy was the team鈥檚 mentor.

In total, 11 faculty-mentored teams competed and delivered presentations to Cubico Senior Vice President Adam Overfield and his colleague Yago Cavanagh, who visited MSU for the event.

鈥淥ur aim was to take some of the ideas developed by the students and further investigate their implementation,鈥 Overfield said.

Cory Gallo, professor of landscape architecture and CALS interim assistant dean, worked with Cubico staff and MSU faculty to organize the competition.

鈥淭oday, thousands of acres of solar farms are being planned and built in 花秀直播,鈥 Gallo said. 鈥淎grivoltaics is a huge potential industry, and this competition was an excellent opportunity for our students to help shape its future.

鈥淭he Cubico staff were really engaged in the student presentations and excited about their ideas,鈥 Gallo said. 鈥淲e greatly appreciate the opportunity they gave our students to think about present-day problems and design creative solutions.鈥

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