4.6 Article

Floating photovoltaics could mitigate climate change impacts on water body temperature and stratification

期刊

SOLAR ENERGY
卷 219, 期 -, 页码 24-33

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.solener.2021.01.076

关键词

Floating solar; Floatovoltaics; Renewables; Mixed depth; Ecosystem impacts; Lake management

资金

  1. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/R010226/1]
  2. United Utilities, with GE's Industrial CASE studentship through the Envision Doctoral Training Partnership
  3. NERC Industrial Innovation Fellowship [NE/R013489/1]
  4. NERC [NE/R013489/1, NE/R010226/1] Funding Source: UKRI

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Floating solar photovoltaics, or floatovoltaics (FPV), are a new form of renewable energy experiencing rapid growth in deployment. While offering advantages such as decarbonizing energy supply and reducing land-use pressures, their impacts on lake temperature and stratification are still unresolved. The study simulated the effects of different sizes and designs of FPV arrays on lake thermal structure, finding complex and variable responses that could have significant implications for ecosystem services and water treatment costs.
Floating solar photovoltaics, or floatovoltaics (FPV), are a relatively new form of renewable energy, currently experiencing rapid growth in deployment. FPV decarbonises the energy supply while reducing land-use pressures, offers higher electricity generating efficiencies compared to ground-based systems and reduces water body evaporation. However, the effects on lake temperature and stratification of FPV both sheltering the water?s surface from the wind and limiting the solar radiation reaching the water column are unresolved, despite temperature and stratification being key drivers of the ecosystem response to FPV deployment. These unresolved impacts present a barrier to further deployment, with water body managers concerned of any deleterious effects. To overcome this knowledge gap, here the effects of FPV-induced changes in wind speed and solar radiation on lake thermal structure were modelled utilising the one-dimensional process-based MyLake model. To resolve the effect of FPV arrays of different sizes and designs, observed wind speed and solar radiation were scaled using a factorial approach from 0% to 100% in 1% intervals. The simulations returned a highly non-linear response, dependent on system design and coverage. The responses could be either positive or negative, and were often highly variable, although, most commonly, water temperatures reduce, stratification shortens and mixed depths shallow. Modifications to the thermal dynamics of the water body may subsequently drastically alter biogeochemical processes, with fundamental implications for ecosystem service provision and water treatment costs. The extreme nature of response for particular wind speed and solar radiation combinations results in impacts that could be comparable to, or more significant than, climate change. As such, depending on how they are used, FPV have the potential to mitigate some of the impacts of climate change on water bodies and could be a useful tool for water body managers in dealing with changes to water quality, or, conversely, they could induce deleterious impacts on standing water ecosystems. These simulations provide a starting point to inform the design of future systems that maximise ecosystem service and environmental co-benefits from this growing water body change of use.

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