ScienceDaily
Your source for the latest research news
Follow Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Subscribe RSS Feeds Newsletters
New:
  • Lockdown: Human-Linked Earth Vibrations Down
  • Spread of Smallpox in the Viking Age
  • Neanderthal Heritage and Experience of Pain
  • Sun-Like Star With Two Giant Exoplanets
  • Lab-Made Virus Mimics COVID-19 Virus
  • The Real Reason Behind Goosebumps
  • 130 Mammals: Equal Brain Connectivity
  • Volcanoes On Venus Are Still Active
  • Plato Was Right: Earth Made Basically of Cubes
  • Solar Mission Images Reveal 'Campfires' On Sun
advertisement
Follow all of ScienceDaily's latest research news and top science headlines!
Science News
from research organizations

1

2

COVID-19 shutdown led to increased solar power output

Date:
July 22, 2020
Source:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Summary:
As the air cleared after lockdowns, solar installations in Delhi produced 8 percent more power, a new study shows.
Share:
FULL STORY

As the Covid-19 shutdowns and stay-at-home orders brought much of the world's travel and commerce to a standstill, people around the world started noticing clearer skies as a result of lower levels of air pollution. Now, researchers have been able to demonstrate that those clearer skies had a measurable impact on the output from solar photovoltaic panels, leading to a more than 8 percent increase in the power output from installations in Delhi.

advertisement

While such an improved output was not unexpected, the researchers say this is the first study to demonstrate and quantify the impact of the reduced air pollution on solar output. The effect should apply to solar installations worldwide, but would normally be very difficult to measure against a background of natural variations in solar panel output caused by everything from clouds to dust on the panels. The extraordinary conditions triggered by the pandemic, with its sudden cessation of normal activities, combined with high-quality air-pollution data from one of the world's smoggiest cities, afforded the opportunity to harness data from an unprecedented, unplanned natural experiment.

The findings are reported in the journal Joule, in a paper by MIT professor of mechanical engineering Tonio Buonassisi, research scientist Ian Marius Peters, and three others in Singapore and Germany.

The study was an extension of previous research the team has been conducting in Delhi for several years. The impetus for the work came after an unusual weather pattern in 2013 swept a concentrated plume of smoke from forest fires in Indonesia across a vast swath of Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore, where Peters, who had just arrived in the region, found "it was so bad that you couldn't see the buildings on the other side of the street."

Since he was already doing research on solar photovoltaics, Peters decided to investigate what effects the air pollution was having on solar panel output. The team had good long-term data on both solar panel output and solar insolation, gathered at the same time by monitoring stations set up adjacent to the solar installations. They saw that during the 18-day-long haze event, the performance of some types of solar panels decreased, while others stayed the same or increased slightly. That distinction proved useful in teasing apart the effects of pollution from other variables that could be at play, such as weather conditions.

Peters later learned that a high-quality, years-long record of actual measurements of fine particulate air pollution (particles less than 2.5 micrometers in size) had been collected every hour, year after year, at the U.S. Embassy in Delhi. That provided the necessary baseline for determining the actual effects of pollution on solar panel output; the researchers compared the air pollution data from the embassy with meteorological data on cloudiness and the solar irradiation data from the sensors.

advertisement

They identified a roughly 10 percent overall reduction in output from the solar installations in Delhi because of pollution -- enough to make a significant dent in the facilities' financial projections.

To see how the Covid-19 shutdowns had affected the situation, they were able to use the mathematical tools they had developed, along with the embassy's ongoing data collection, to see the impact of reductions in travel and factory operations. They compared the data from before and after India went into mandatory lockdown on March 24, and also compared this with data from the previous three years.

Pollution levels were down by about 50 percent after the shutdown, they found. As a result, the total output from the solar panels was increased by 8.3 percent in late March, and by 5.9 percent in April, they calculated.

"These deviations are much larger than the typical variations we have" within a year or from year to year, Peters says -- three to four times greater. "So we can't explain this with just fluctuations." The amount of difference, he says, is roughly the difference between the expected performance of a solar panel in Houston versus one in Toronto.

An 8 percent increase in output might not sound like much, Buonassisi says, but "the margins of profit are very small for these businesses." If a solar company was expecting to get a 2 percent profit margin out of their expected 100 percent panel output, and suddenly they are getting 108 percent output, that means their margin has increased fivefold, from 2 percent to 10 percent, he points out.

advertisement

The findings provide real data on what can happen in the future as emissions are reduced globally, he says. "This is the first real quantitative evaluation where you almost have a switch that you can turn on and off for air pollution, and you can see the effect," he says. "You have an opportunity to baseline these models with and without air pollution."

By doing so, he says, "it gives a glimpse into a world with significantly less air pollution." It also demonstrates that the very act of increasing the usage of solar electricity, and thus displacing fossil-fuel generation that produces air pollution, makes those panels more efficient all the time.

Putting solar panels on one's house, he says, "is helping not only yourself, not only putting money in your pocket, but it's also helping everybody else out there who already has solar panels installed, as well as everyone else who will install them over the next 20 years." In a way, a rising tide of solar panels raises all solar panels.

Though the focus was on Delhi, because the effects there are so strong and easy to detect, this effect "is true anywhere where you have some kind of air pollution. If you reduce it, it will have beneficial consequences for solar panels," Peters says.

Even so, not every claim of such effects is necessarily real, he says, and the details do matter. For example, clearer skies were also noted across much of Europe as a result of the shutdowns, and some news reports described exceptional output levels from solar farms in Germany and in the U.K. But the researchers say that just turned out to be a coincidence.

"The air pollution levels in Germany and Great Britain are generally so low that most PV installations are not significantly affected by them," Peters says. After checking the data, what contributed most to those high levels of solar output this spring, he says, turned out to be just "extremely nice weather," which produced record numbers of sunlight hours.

The research team included C. Brabec and J. Hauch at the Helmholtz-Institute Erlangen-Nuremberg for Renewable Energies, in Germany, where Peters also now works, and A. Nobre at Cleantech Solar in Singapore. The work was supported by the Bavarian State Government.

make a difference: sponsored opportunity

Story Source:

Materials provided by Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Original written by David L. Chandler. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Ian Marius Peters, Christoph Brabec, Tonio Buonassisi, Jens Hauch, André M. Nobre. The Impact of COVID-19-Related Measures on the Solar Resource in Areas with High Levels of Air Pollution. Joule, 2020; DOI: 10.1016/j.joule.2020.06.009

Cite This Page:

  • MLA
  • APA
  • Chicago
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "COVID-19 shutdown led to increased solar power output." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 22 July 2020. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/07/200722093452.htm>.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. (2020, July 22). COVID-19 shutdown led to increased solar power output. ScienceDaily. Retrieved July 23, 2020 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/07/200722093452.htm
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "COVID-19 shutdown led to increased solar power output." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/07/200722093452.htm (accessed July 23, 2020).

  • RELATED TOPICS
    • Health & Medicine
      • Lung Disease
      • Vitamin D
      • Workplace Health
    • Matter & Energy
      • Solar Energy
      • Energy Policy
      • Automotive and Transportation
    • Earth & Climate
      • Environmental Science
      • Air Quality
      • Pollution
    • Science & Society
      • Environmental Policies
      • Energy Issues
      • Ocean Policy
advertisement

  • RELATED TERMS
    • Solar cell
    • History of Earth
    • Economic growth
    • Alternative fuel vehicle
    • Solar power
    • Renewable energy
    • Nuclear power plant
    • Power station

1

2

3

4

5
RELATED STORIES

Helping Cities Make Power Grids Safer, More Reliable
May 28, 2019 — Solar power researchers have traditionally used the power measurements from single residential solar photovoltaic systems to estimate the power generated within a city. But one installation ...
Team Locates Nearly All US Solar Panels in a Billion Images With Machine Learning
Dec. 19, 2018 — Researchers have identified the GPS locations and sizes of almost all US solar power installations from a billion images. Using the data, which is public, they identified factors that promote the use ...
Air Pollution Can Put a Dent in Solar Power
Aug. 29, 2018 — Air pollution, especially in urban areas, can significantly reduce the power output from solar panels, and needs to be considered when design solar installations in or near ...
Air Pollution Casts Shadow Over Solar Energy Production
June 26, 2017 — Global solar energy production is taking a major hit due to air pollution and dust. The first study of its kind shows airborne particles and their accumulation on solar cells is cutting energy output ...
FROM AROUND THE WEB

Below are relevant articles that may interest you. ScienceDaily shares links with scholarly publications in the TrendMD network and earns revenue from third-party advertisers, where indicated.
  Print   Email   Share

advertisement

1

2

3

4

5
Most Popular
this week

PLANTS & ANIMALS
COVID-19 False Negative Test Results If Used Too Early
MRI Scans of the Brains of 130 Mammals, Including Humans, Indicate Equal Connectivity
Global Methane Emissions Soar to Record High
EARTH & CLIMATE
Plato Was Right: Earth Is Made, on Average, of Cubes
Clothes Last Longer and Shed Fewer Microfibers in Quicker, Cooler Washing Cycles
Reduction in Commercial Flights Due to COVID-19 Leading to Less Accurate Weather Forecasts
FOSSILS & RUINS
Boy or Girl? It's in the Father's Genes
Breakthrough in Studying Ancient DNA from Doggerland That Separates the UK from Europe
Blue-Eyed Humans Have a Single, Common Ancestor
advertisement

Strange & Offbeat
 

PLANTS & ANIMALS
Meet Cosmo, a Bull Calf Designed to Produce More Male Offspring
Giant, Fruit-Gulping Pigeon Eaten Into Extinction on Pacific Islands
Is It a Bird, a Plane? Not Superman, but a Flapping Wing Drone
EARTH & CLIMATE
COVID-19 Lockdown Caused 50 Percent Global Reduction in Human-Linked Earth Vibrations
Spider Monkey Groups as Collective Computers
Plato Was Right: Earth Is Made, on Average, of Cubes
FOSSILS & RUINS
Neanderthals May Have Had a Lower Threshold for Pain
Arizona Rock Core Sheds Light on Triassic Dark Ages
Breakthrough in Studying Ancient DNA from Doggerland That Separates the UK from Europe
SD
  • SD
    • Home Page
    • Top Science News
    • Latest News
  • Home
    • Home Page
    • Top Science News
    • Latest News
  • Health
    • View all the latest top news in the health sciences,
      or browse the topics below:
      Health & Medicine
      • Allergy
      • Alternative Medicine
      • Birth Control
      • Cancer
      • Diabetes
      • Diseases
      • Heart Disease
      • HIV and AIDS
      • Obesity
      • Stem Cells
      • ... more topics
      Mind & Brain
      • ADD and ADHD
      • Addiction
      • Alzheimer's
      • Autism
      • Depression
      • Headaches
      • Intelligence
      • Psychology
      • Relationships
      • Schizophrenia
      • ... more topics
      Living Well
      • Parenting
      • Pregnancy
      • Sexual Health
      • Skin Care
      • Men's Health
      • Women's Health
      • Nutrition
      • Diet and Weight Loss
      • Fitness
      • Healthy Aging
      • ... more topics
  • Tech
    • View all the latest top news in the physical sciences & technology,
      or browse the topics below:
      Matter & Energy
      • Aviation
      • Chemistry
      • Electronics
      • Fossil Fuels
      • Nanotechnology
      • Physics
      • Quantum Physics
      • Solar Energy
      • Technology
      • Wind Energy
      • ... more topics
      Space & Time
      • Astronomy
      • Black Holes
      • Dark Matter
      • Extrasolar Planets
      • Mars
      • Moon
      • Solar System
      • Space Telescopes
      • Stars
      • Sun
      • ... more topics
      Computers & Math
      • Artificial Intelligence
      • Communications
      • Computer Science
      • Hacking
      • Mathematics
      • Quantum Computers
      • Robotics
      • Software
      • Video Games
      • Virtual Reality
      • ... more topics
  • Enviro
    • View all the latest top news in the environmental sciences,
      or browse the topics below:
      Plants & Animals
      • Agriculture and Food
      • Animals
      • Biology
      • Biotechnology
      • Endangered Animals
      • Extinction
      • Genetically Modified
      • Microbes and More
      • New Species
      • Zoology
      • ... more topics
      Earth & Climate
      • Climate
      • Earthquakes
      • Environment
      • Geography
      • Geology
      • Global Warming
      • Hurricanes
      • Ozone Holes
      • Pollution
      • Weather
      • ... more topics
      Fossils & Ruins
      • Ancient Civilizations
      • Anthropology
      • Archaeology
      • Dinosaurs
      • Early Humans
      • Early Mammals
      • Evolution
      • Lost Treasures
      • Origin of Life
      • Paleontology
      • ... more topics
  • Society
    • View all the latest top news in the social sciences & education,
      or browse the topics below:
      Science & Society
      • Arts & Culture
      • Consumerism
      • Economics
      • Political Science
      • Privacy Issues
      • Public Health
      • Racial Disparity
      • Religion
      • Sports
      • World Development
      • ... more topics
      Business & Industry
      • Biotechnology & Bioengineering
      • Computers & Internet
      • Energy & Resources
      • Engineering
      • Medical Technology
      • Pharmaceuticals
      • Transportation
      • ... more topics
      Education & Learning
      • Animal Learning & Intelligence
      • Creativity
      • Educational Psychology
      • Educational Technology
      • Infant & Preschool Learning
      • Learning Disorders
      • STEM Education
      • ... more topics
  • Quirky
    • Top News
    • Human Quirks
    • Odd Creatures
    • Bizarre Things
    • Weird World
Free Subscriptions

Get the latest science news with ScienceDaily's free email newsletters, updated daily and weekly. Or view hourly updated newsfeeds in your RSS reader:

  • Email Newsletters
  • RSS Feeds
Follow Us

Keep up to date with the latest news from ScienceDaily via social networks:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
Have Feedback?

Tell us what you think of ScienceDaily -- we welcome both positive and negative comments. Have any problems using the site? Questions?

  • Leave Feedback
  • Contact Us
About This Site  |  Staff  |  Reviews  |  Contribute  |  Advertise  |  Privacy Policy  |  Editorial Policy  |  Terms of Use
Copyright 2020 ScienceDaily or by other parties, where indicated. All rights controlled by their respective owners.
Content on this website is for information only. It is not intended to provide medical or other professional advice.
Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily, its staff, its contributors, or its partners.
Financial support for ScienceDaily comes from advertisements and referral programs, where indicated.
— CCPA: Do Not Sell My Information — — GDPR: Privacy Settings —