Enabling synergies between solar PV projects and the local environment – International Union for Conservation of Nature

A call for mobilisation to the entire Union.
Data, analysis, convening and action.
The world’s largest and most diverse environmental network.
IUCN tools, publications and other resources.
Get Involved
Sixteenth session of the IRENA Assembly
Solar photovoltaics (PV) is central to the global energy transition. In 2024 alone, solar PV accounted for 42% of installed renewable capacity worldwide and more than three-quarters of new renewable additions. Looking ahead, IRENA projections indicate that solar PV will contribute around half of the renewable capacity required by 2050 to meet the Paris Agreement goals.
As deployment accelerates and projects scale up, attention is increasingly turning to how solar PV interacts with local environments. Solar projects can generate significant climate and air quality benefits, yet they may also affect biodiversity, ecosystems, and land use if environmental considerations are not fully integrated into planning, siting, and design. Conversely, when well planned, solar PV can deliver environmental co-benefits—supporting ecosystem restoration, land productivity, and biodiversity through approaches such as agrivoltaics, solar grazing, ecovoltaics, floating PV, and land degradation recovery.
This session, convened during the Sixteenth IRENA Assembly under the theme Powering Humanity: Renewable Energy for Shared Prosperity, will explore how to balance rapid solar PV deployment with environmental protection and enhancement, ensuring that the energy transition benefits both people and nature.
The session will convene policymakers, energy experts, industry representatives, and conservation organisations to:
IRENA will present key findings from its latest report on the local environmental impacts and benefits of large-scale solar PV projects, jointly developed with IUCN and the China Renewable Energy Engineering Institute (CREEI). Participants will exchange policy experiences and best practices from different regions and market contexts.
IUCN and IRENA signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) at the IUCN World Conservation Congress in Abu Dhabi in October 2025, with the aim of accelerating a renewable energy transition that is both sustainable and nature-positive.
Sign up for an IUCN newsletter
linkedin twitter facebook instagram youtubetiktok
Headquarters   Rue Mauverney 28 1196 Gland Switzerland   +41 22 9990000   +41 22 9990002(Fax)
©IUCN, International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources

source

This entry was posted in Renewables. Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply