Yes someone showed me around their solar field with sheep underneath.
The sheep shade under the panels and the grass grows well.
It would work well for fixed panels, but these tilt to almost 90° each way to keep the evening dust laden breeze from building up on the panels, lie flat when there are high winds or a cloudy day, but otherwise, track to around 45° each way ..... I can picture some mindless sheep being pinned under a panel as it tilted .... and someone would have to oversee the sheep's health etc ..... probably not a financially viable option in a country with so much free space.
Add to that, every 3 mths, a tractor with a spinning brush where a barrel mower would normally be, sprays detergent in front of the brush and fresh water behind it to rinse and the panels are at near the 90° mark, rows facing each other, so this thing can clean two rows with a simple turn around at the end. As the tractor sets up to do the next two rows, the cleaned rows go back on line. These panels are the height of the average person, so although the rows look close to each other, tilted face to face there is over 2.5 mtr between them, plenty for the tractor to drive up and down.
The output between a clean panel and panel with enough of a build up to show a white tinge, is over 5% improvement .... I'm guessing these are 550W panels by the size, that more than pays the cost of cleaning them when you have that many panels ......
I saw one solar farm where they tried goats to keep the weeds under control, stupid things either ate the wiring and killed them, or they climbed on top of the panels when they were flat enough for them not to slide off .... and did quite a bit of damage when they tried to climb on at too steep an angle or try to avoid sliding off as the angle changed ....
Love goats, but they are about as stupid as sheep .......
T1 Terry
The thing that makes no sense to me, is developers buying up good agricultural land, sub dividing it and filling it with houses that the rain water gutters near touch each out, a token patch of lawn, the rest is either roof tops, concrete driveways or bitumen roads.
They that complain that the area floods when it rains big time .... that is why it was prime agricultural land ....... It gets plenty of rain to water it

There is no road network so they are caught for hrs at a time getting into the city to work, then back home again .... so they have to spend mega tax payer $$ building multi lane highways and rail networks .......
Why didn't they spend the big $$ first and biuld the houses outside the city prime food bowl land?
Now, all the good growing soil with good rainfall is covered in houses and only less optimal land is available for growing vegetables and grass for cattle ...... now they are panicking about food security and the cost of having to grow vegies in hydroponics converted shipping containers so it is fresh when it reaches the city markets ...... where were the brains trust when this nonsense started?
T1 Terry