Abstract

Forecasting solar energy from cloud cover observations is crucial to truly anticipate future changes in power supply. On an intra-hour timescale, ground-level sky cameras located near a solar site offer the most valuable source of information on incoming clouds. In the literature, the analysis of these hyperlocal cloud cover observations for solar modelling is increasingly performed by deep learning algorithms trained and tested on years’ worth of local data. However, this approach is not suitable for industrial applications since solar energy producers cannot wait for years of local data collection to start generating reliable solar forecasts. However, they might own relevant multi-location data collected from other solar sites over time. This study thus explores the capability of such algorithms to generalise beyond their training location in two data scarce conditions: zero-shot learning (i.e. direct application of a trained model to a new location without local fine-tuning) and few-shot learning (i.e. calibration of a pre-trained model based on very limited local data such as a day of observations). Zero-shot learning results show that using local clear-sky models to normalise output variables (e.g. solar irradiance or solar energy production values) facilitates cross-dataset transfer learning. Compared to previous methods, the resulting forecast skill increases by close to 25% in cloudy conditions and by more than 700% in clear-sky conditions. An additional gain is observed when local data collected in overcast weather conditions are used for model calibration via few-shot learning. The corresponding neural networks trained in data scarce conditions achieve comparable performance to expert local models based on years of training data. These promising results shed light on the potential of large-scale and multi-location sky image datasets to improve the generalisation skills of solar forecasting algorithms.

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