Effect of Solar Irradiation Inter-Annual Variability on PV and CSP Power Plants Production Capacity: Portugal Case-Study
Authors/Creators
Description
The sizing of solar energy power plants is usually made using typical meteorological years, which disregards the inter-annual variability of the solar resource. Nevertheless, such variability is crucial for the bankability of these projects because it impacts on the production goals set at the time of the supply agreement. For that reason, this study aims to fill the gap in the existing literature and analyse the impact that solar resource variability has on solar power plant production as applied to the case of Portugal (southern Europe). To that end, 17 years (2003–2019) of meteorological data from a network of 90 ground stations hosted by the Portuguese Meteorological Service is examined. Annual capacity factor regarding photovoltaic (PV) and concentrating solar power (CSP) plants is computed using the System Advisor Model, used here for solar power performance simulations. In terms of results, while a long-term trend for increase in annual irradiation is found for Global Horizontal Irradiance (GHI) and Direct Normal Irradiance (DNI), 0.4148 and 3.2711 kWh/m2/year, respectively, consistent with a solar brightening period, no corresponding trend is found for PV or CSP production. The latter is attributed to the long-term upward trend of 0.0231 °C/year in annual average ambient temperature, which contributes to PV and CSP efficiency reduction. Spatial analysis of inter-annual relative variability for GHI and DNI shows a reduction in variability from the north to the south of the country, as well as for the respective power plant productions. Particularly, for PV, inter-annual variability ranges between 2.45% and 12.07% in Faro and Santarém, respectively, while higher values are generally found for CSP, 3.71% in Faro and 16.04% in São Pedro de Moel. These results are a contribution to future instalments of PV and CSP systems in southern Portugal, a region with very favourable conditions for solar energy harvesting, due to the combination of high production capacity and low inter-annual variability.
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Acknowledgments
The authors are thankful to IPMA and ICT for providing solar radiation data from
their measuring networks to perform this study. A.M.T. thanks the Millennium BCP foundation and
the Camoes I.P. for their financial support. Ailton Tavares also thanks ICT, LAETA, and the Renewable
Energies Chair of the University of Évora. R.C. acknowledges the Juan de la Cierva Formación 2020
program, reference FJC2020-043159-I, funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and by the
European Union NextGenerationEU/PRTR. R.C. also acknowledges the grant PID2020-119403RB-C21
(HECTOR), funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033. F.M.L. acknowledges the funding of
IPMA in the framework of the Horizon Europe CERISE project (N.º 9227/2023). H.G.S. acknowledges
the Physics Department of the University of Évora for supporting his work and the discussions on
this topic held with Jorge Neto, Afonso Cavaco, Paulo Canhoto, and Manuel Collares-Pereira.
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