Large-scale wind and solar power 'could green the Sahara'
As we've known, we are just scratching the service of the immense potential of large-scale renewables. Clean energy will transform our lives in so many ways. And our landscape.
Large-scale wind and solar power 'could green the Sahara'
By Matt McGrath
Installing huge
numbers of solar panels and wind turbines in the Sahara desert would
have a major impact on rainfall, vegetation and temperatures,
researchers say.
They found that the actions of wind turbines would double the amount of rain that would fall in the region. Solar panels have a similar impact although they act in a different way. The authors say their work reinforces the view that large-scale renewables could transform the Sahara region. The scientists modeled what would happen if 9 million sq km of the Sahara desert was covered in renewable energy sources. They focused on this area because it is sparsely populated, and it is also
exposed to significant amounts of sun and wind and is close to large
energy markets in Europe and the Middle East. According to
authors' calculations, a massive installation in the desert would
generate more than four times the amount of energy that the world
currently uses every year. Previous studies have shown
that installing wind and solar can have an impact on temperatures - but
the key difference with this research is the impact on vegetation. "Our
model results show that large-scale solar and wind farms in the Sahara
would more than double the precipitation, especially in the Sahel, where
the magnitude of rainfall increase is between 20mm and 500mm per year,"
said Dr Yan Li, the lead author of the paper from the University of
Illinois, US. "As a result, vegetation cover fraction increases by about 20%." In
the Sahel, the semi-arid region that lies to the south of the Sahara,
average rainfall increased 1.12mm per day where wind farms were present,
according to the study.
How do turbines and panels increase rainfall?
With
wind turbines, it's all about the mixing of air caused by the rotation
of the blades. Wind farms mix warmer air from above, which creates a
feedback loop whereby more evaporation, precipitation and plant growth
occurs. "Wind farms increase surface roughness and therefore
increase wind converging into low-pressure areas," said Dr Li. "The
converging air has to rise, making it cool off and moisture condense,
which will lead to increased rainfall."
Solar panels actually reduce the reflection of
sunlight from the surface known as the albedo effect. This triggers a
positive albedo-precipitation-vegetation feedback that leads to
precipitation increases of about 50%, the authors report
. "The
panels directly reduce the surface albedo which leads to more solar
energy absorption and surface warming, which in turn strengthens the
Saharan heat low, leading to more rising air and precipitation," Dr Li
explained.
What would be the impact on people?
Mostly positive, say the authors. "Precipitation
increases predicted by our model would lead to substantial improvements
of rain-fed agriculture in the region, and vegetation increases would
lead to the growth in production of livestock," said Dr Safa
Motesharrei, from the University of Maryland, another author of the
paper. "The Sahara, the Sahel, and the Middle East include some
of the driest regions in the world, while experiencing high growth of
population and poverty, and our study has major implications for
addressing the intertwined sustainability challenges of the
energy-water-food nexus in this region."
But temperature rises are bad for climate change, right?
The authors say that the heating impact of all those turbines and panels would not make an important difference. "The
local warming by wind and solar farms is much smaller compared with the
reduced future warming from greenhouse gases that renewable power at
this scale would imply," said Dr Li.
Will this work with smaller-scale renewable installations?
The
authors also looked at other desert locations in different parts of the
world but they found the impact on rainfall and vegetation growth was
much smaller. They also believe that fewer panels and turbines would
have a limited effect. "Generally, the climate impacts are
reduced with reduced installations, but this result depends also very
much on the exact locations," said Dr Li.
"High-resolution modelling may be necessary to better investigate more regional impacts of wind and solar farms."
Should we now proceed with big installations in desert areas?
"Yes, I think so," said Dr Li. "The
main message for people, policymakers, and investors is the enormous
benefits to the people, society, and ecosystem as a result of these
solar and wind farms." "We hope that, in the light of our
findings, and because of the primary climate effect of these farms is
the reduction of anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions and the
resulting mitigation of climate change, we could transform our energy
sources. That can lead in turn to sustaining freshwater, food, and life
on our planet."
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