Abstract

Abstract. Among the renewable power sources, solar power is rapidly becoming popular because it is inexhaustible, clean, and dependable. It has also become more efficient since the power conversion efficiency of photovoltaic solar cells has increased. Following these trends, solar power will become more affordable in years to come and considerable investments are to be expected. Despite the size of solar plants, the sitting procedure is a crucial factor for their efficiency and financial viability. Many aspects influence such a decision: legal, environmental, technical, and financial to name a few. This paper describes a general integrated framework to evaluate land suitability for the optimal placement of photovoltaic solar power plants, which is based on a combination of a geographic information system (GIS), remote sensing techniques, and multi-criteria decision-making methods. An application of the proposed framework for the Limassol district in Cyprus is further illustrated. The combination of a GIS and multi-criteria methods produces an excellent analysis tool that creates an extensive database of spatial and non-spatial data, which will be used to simplify problems as well as solve and promote the use of multiple criteria. A set of environmental, economic, social, and technical constrains, based on recent Cypriot legislation, European's Union policies, and expert advice, identifies the potential sites for solar park installation. The pairwise comparison method in the context of the analytic hierarchy process (AHP) is applied to estimate the criteria weights in order to establish their relative importance in site evaluation. In addition, four different methods to combine information layers and check their sensitivity were used. The first considered all the criteria as being equally important and assigned them equal weight, whereas the others grouped the criteria and graded them according to their objective perceived importance. The overall suitability of the study region for sitting solar parks is appraised through the summation rule. Strict application of the framework depicts 3.0 % of the study region scoring a best-suitability index for solar resource exploitation, hence minimizing the risk in a potential investment. However, using different weighting schemes for criteria, suitable areas may reach up to 83 % of the study region. The suggested methodological framework applied can be easily utilized by potential investors and renewable energy developers, through a front end web-based application with proper GUI for personalized weighting schemes.

Highlights

  • Energy is an essential part of modern life as almost all human activities are strongly connected with it

  • This study presents a model, which can be used to evaluate large areas for optimal site selection for a solar park

  • A decision analysis methodological framework for solar energy exploitation and site evaluation is developed and applied in the Limassol district in Cyprus. The framework it is a combination of already existing tools such as multi-criteria analysis, analytic hierarchy process (AHP), and integrated site evaluation in a straightforward way

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Energy is an essential part of modern life as almost all human activities are strongly connected with it. Skarlatos: Optimal site selection for sitting a solar park of technically accessible energy over large areas of Earth’s surface and solar energy technologies are no longer cost prohibitive (Hernandez et al, 2014). Currently it only covers a minor portion of global energy demands (0.05 % of the total primary energy supply) as photovoltaic (PV) power generates less than 1 % of total electricity supply (Solangi et al, 2011); solar energy has great future potential

Objectives
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call