A global inventory of photovoltaic solar energy generating units

Photovoltaic (PV) solar energy generating capacity has grown by 41 per cent per year since 20091. Energy system projections that mitigate climate change and aid universal energy access show a nearly ten-fold increase in PV solar energy generating capacity by 20402,3. Geospatial data describing the e...

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Egile Nagusiak: Kruitwagen, L, Story, KT, Friedrich, J, Byers, L, Skillman, S, Hepburn, C
Formatua: Journal article
Hizkuntza:English
Argitaratua: Springer Nature 2021
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author Kruitwagen, L
Story, KT
Friedrich, J
Byers, L
Skillman, S
Hepburn, C
author_facet Kruitwagen, L
Story, KT
Friedrich, J
Byers, L
Skillman, S
Hepburn, C
author_sort Kruitwagen, L
collection OXFORD
description Photovoltaic (PV) solar energy generating capacity has grown by 41 per cent per year since 20091. Energy system projections that mitigate climate change and aid universal energy access show a nearly ten-fold increase in PV solar energy generating capacity by 20402,3. Geospatial data describing the energy system are required to manage generation intermittency, mitigate climate change risks, and identify trade-offs with biodiversity, conservation and land protection priorities caused by the land-use and land-cover change necessary for PV deployment. Currently available inventories of solar generating capacity cannot fully address these needs1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9. Here we provide a global inventory of commercial-, industrial- and utility-scale PV installations (that is, PV generating stations in excess of 10 kilowatts nameplate capacity) by using a longitudinal corpus of remote sensing imagery, machine learning and a large cloud computation infrastructure. We locate and verify 68,661 facilities, an increase of 432 per cent (in number of facilities) on previously available asset-level data. With the help of a hand-labelled test set, we estimate global installed generating capacity to be 423 gigawatts (−75/+77 gigawatts) at the end of 2018. Enrichment of our dataset with estimates of facility installation date, historic land-cover classification and proximity to vulnerable areas allows us to show that most of the PV solar energy facilities are sited on cropland, followed by aridlands and grassland. Our inventory could aid PV delivery aligned with the Sustainable Development Goals.
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spelling oxford-uuid:0478449c-ccbb-4f52-afb3-d38ffef3a7fa2022-04-27T06:37:36ZA global inventory of photovoltaic solar energy generating unitsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:0478449c-ccbb-4f52-afb3-d38ffef3a7faEnglishSymplectic ElementsSpringer Nature2021Kruitwagen, LStory, KTFriedrich, JByers, LSkillman, SHepburn, CPhotovoltaic (PV) solar energy generating capacity has grown by 41 per cent per year since 20091. Energy system projections that mitigate climate change and aid universal energy access show a nearly ten-fold increase in PV solar energy generating capacity by 20402,3. Geospatial data describing the energy system are required to manage generation intermittency, mitigate climate change risks, and identify trade-offs with biodiversity, conservation and land protection priorities caused by the land-use and land-cover change necessary for PV deployment. Currently available inventories of solar generating capacity cannot fully address these needs1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9. Here we provide a global inventory of commercial-, industrial- and utility-scale PV installations (that is, PV generating stations in excess of 10 kilowatts nameplate capacity) by using a longitudinal corpus of remote sensing imagery, machine learning and a large cloud computation infrastructure. We locate and verify 68,661 facilities, an increase of 432 per cent (in number of facilities) on previously available asset-level data. With the help of a hand-labelled test set, we estimate global installed generating capacity to be 423 gigawatts (−75/+77 gigawatts) at the end of 2018. Enrichment of our dataset with estimates of facility installation date, historic land-cover classification and proximity to vulnerable areas allows us to show that most of the PV solar energy facilities are sited on cropland, followed by aridlands and grassland. Our inventory could aid PV delivery aligned with the Sustainable Development Goals.
spellingShingle Kruitwagen, L
Story, KT
Friedrich, J
Byers, L
Skillman, S
Hepburn, C
A global inventory of photovoltaic solar energy generating units
title A global inventory of photovoltaic solar energy generating units
title_full A global inventory of photovoltaic solar energy generating units
title_fullStr A global inventory of photovoltaic solar energy generating units
title_full_unstemmed A global inventory of photovoltaic solar energy generating units
title_short A global inventory of photovoltaic solar energy generating units
title_sort global inventory of photovoltaic solar energy generating units
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