A European research group has adapted a pollution model for use across the continent, analyzing full and partial rain-cleaning scenarios to calculate energy losses and increases in levelized energy costs (LCOE), marking Europe’s first techno-economic assessment of PV pollution.
A global team of researchers has completed Europe’s first European techno-economic analysis of PV pollution losses.
The researchers developed pollution maps by interpolating analytical data and calibrating them with ground-measured losses from sensors across Europe. They evaluated the cleaning effect of rain under two scenarios: one where the panels were assumed to be completely cleaned and another where only 10% of the contamination was removed.
“The main objectives of the current research are twofold: first, to map both energy and economic losses in PV systems due to pollution patterns, and second, to share with the community an adapted version of a pollution model that allows cleaning effectiveness can be adjusted. of rainfall, which could be reapplied in additional studies,” the scientists said. “The maps and models not only provide insight into the spatial distribution of pollution, but also provide a valuable resource for stakeholders involved in decision-making processes related to maintenance planning, resource optimization and environmental impact assessments.”
The researchers calibrated the model for both scenarios and applied it across Europe. If it is assumed that rain cleans the panels perfectly, the average annual pollution loss in electricity is 0.9%, with Greece showing the highest loss at 4.3% and Norway the lowest at 0.2%. In the scenario where rain cleans only 10% of the pollution, average losses increase to 5.3%, peaking at 14% in Spain and falling to 1.2% in Norway.
By economic standards, perfect rain cleaning leads to an average 1% increase in LCOE, peaking at 4.6% in Turkey. The average decline in net present value (NPV) is €9.10 ($9.56)/kW, with Turkey experiencing the largest decline at €69.30/kW. When rain removes only 10% of the dirt, the average LCOE increase is 5.8% and in Spain it is 16.3%. The average NPV reduction is €45/kW, with Turkey showing the largest reduction at €230.40/kW.
“The regions with the greatest losses tend to also be those with the highest seasonality due to long and arid summers with typically only a few precipitation events, which in some cases can contribute to the natural cleaning of the solar collectors,” the researchers said.
They presented their results in “Photovoltaic pollution losses in Europe: geographical distribution and cleaning recommendations”, published in Renewable energy. Researchers from the German Aerospace Center (DLR), the Center for Energy, Environment and Technological Research (CIEMAT), the University of Jaén, the Danish European Energy, the Norwegian Institute of Energy Technology (IFE) and the Italian Sapienza University of Rome worked together on the study.
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