Evaluation of extreme weather impacts on utility-scale photovoltaic plant performance in the United States

The global energy system is undergoing significant changes, including a shift in energy generating technologies to more renewable energy sources. However, the dependence of renewable energy sources on local environmental conditions could also increase disruptions in service through exposures to comp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied energy 2021-11, Vol.302, p.117508, Article 117508
Hauptverfasser: Jackson, Nicole D., Gunda, Thushara
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The global energy system is undergoing significant changes, including a shift in energy generating technologies to more renewable energy sources. However, the dependence of renewable energy sources on local environmental conditions could also increase disruptions in service through exposures to compound, extreme weather events. By fusing three diverse datasets (operations and maintenance tickets, weather data, and production data), this analysis presents a novel methodology to identify and evaluate performance impacts arising from extreme weather events across diverse geographical regions. Text analysis of maintenance tickets identified snow, hurricanes, and storms as the leading extreme weather events affecting photovoltaic plants in the United States. Statistical techniques and machine learning were then implemented to identify the magnitude and variability of these extreme weather impacts on site performance. Impacts varied between event and non-event days, with snow events causing the greatest reductions in performance (54.5%), followed by hurricanes (12.6%) and storms (1.1%). Machine learning analysis identified key features in determining if a day is categorized as low performing, such as low irradiance, geographic location, weather features, and site size. This analysis improves our understanding of compound, extreme weather event impacts on photovoltaic systems. These insights can inform planning activities, especially as renewable energy continues to expand into new geographic and climatic regions around the world. •Analyzed 800+ PV sites in the United States for compound, extreme weather impacts.•12% of PV maintenance logs referenced either ambient or extreme weather conditions.•Performance impact between event and non-event days is highest for snow (54.5%).•Low performance driven by plant age, size, location & weather event characteristics.•Data fusion with machine learning extends current methods for energy resilience.
ISSN:0306-2619
1872-9118
DOI:10.1016/j.apenergy.2021.117508