Complementarity of wind and solar power in North Africa: Potential for alleviating energy droughts and impacts of the North Atlantic Oscillation

With growing gas and oil prices, electricity generation based on these fossil fuels is becoming increasingly expensive. Furthermore, the vision of natural gas as a transition fuel is subject to many constraints and uncertainties of economic, environmental, and geopolitical nature. Consequently, rene...

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Published in:Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews
Main Authors: Jurasz, J., Guezgouz, M., Campana, P.E., Kaźmierczak, B., Kuriqi, A., Bloomfield, H., Hingray, B., Canales, F.A., Hunt, J., Sterl, S., Elkadeem, M.R.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Elsevier 1481
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Online Access:https://pure.iiasa.ac.at/id/eprint/19288/
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rser.2023.114181
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spelling ftiiasalaxenburg:oai:pure.iiasa.ac.at:19288 2024-01-21T10:08:31+01:00 Complementarity of wind and solar power in North Africa: Potential for alleviating energy droughts and impacts of the North Atlantic Oscillation Jurasz, J. Guezgouz, M. Campana, P.E. Kaźmierczak, B. Kuriqi, A. Bloomfield, H. Hingray, B. Canales, F.A. Hunt, J. Sterl, S. Elkadeem, M.R. 2024-03 https://pure.iiasa.ac.at/id/eprint/19288/ https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rser.2023.114181 unknown Elsevier Jurasz, J., Guezgouz, M., Campana, P.E., Kaźmierczak, B., Kuriqi, A., Bloomfield, H., Hingray, B., Canales, F.A., et al. (2024). Complementarity of wind and solar power in North Africa: Potential for alleviating energy droughts and impacts of the North Atlantic Oscillation. Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews 191 e114181. Article PeerReviewed 1481 ftiiasalaxenburg https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rser.2023.114181 2023-12-25T00:34:57Z With growing gas and oil prices, electricity generation based on these fossil fuels is becoming increasingly expensive. Furthermore, the vision of natural gas as a transition fuel is subject to many constraints and uncertainties of economic, environmental, and geopolitical nature. Consequently, renewable energies such as solar and wind power are expected to reach new records of installed capacity over the upcoming years. Considering the above, North Africa is one of the regions with the largest renewable resource potential globally. While extensively studied in the literature, these resources remain underutilized. Thus, to contribute to their future successful deployment and integration with the power system, this study presents a spatial and temporal analysis of the nature of solar and wind resources over North Africa from the perspective of energy droughts. Both the frequency and maximal duration of energy droughts are addressed. Both aspects of renewables’ variable nature have been evaluated in the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) context. The analysis considers the period between 1960 and 2020 based on hourly reanalysis data (i.e., near-surface shortwave irradiation, wind speed, and air temperature) and the Hurrel NAO index. The findings show an in-phase relationship between solar power and winter NAO index, particularly over the coastal regions in western North Africa and opposite patterns in its eastern part. For wind energy, the connection with NAO has a more zonal pattern, with negative correlations in the north and positive correlations in the south. Solar energy droughts dominate northern Tunisia, Algeria, and Morocco, while wind energy droughts mainly occur in the Atlas Mountains range. On average, solar energy droughts tend not to exceed 2–3 consecutive days, with the longest extending for five days. Wind energy droughts can be as prolonged as 80 days (Atlas Mountains). Hybridizing solar and wind energy reduces the potential for energy droughts significantly. At the same time, the correlation between ... Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic North Atlantic oscillation IIASA PURE (International Institute of Applied Systems Analysis: PUblications REpository) Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews 191 114181
institution Open Polar
collection IIASA PURE (International Institute of Applied Systems Analysis: PUblications REpository)
op_collection_id ftiiasalaxenburg
language unknown
description With growing gas and oil prices, electricity generation based on these fossil fuels is becoming increasingly expensive. Furthermore, the vision of natural gas as a transition fuel is subject to many constraints and uncertainties of economic, environmental, and geopolitical nature. Consequently, renewable energies such as solar and wind power are expected to reach new records of installed capacity over the upcoming years. Considering the above, North Africa is one of the regions with the largest renewable resource potential globally. While extensively studied in the literature, these resources remain underutilized. Thus, to contribute to their future successful deployment and integration with the power system, this study presents a spatial and temporal analysis of the nature of solar and wind resources over North Africa from the perspective of energy droughts. Both the frequency and maximal duration of energy droughts are addressed. Both aspects of renewables’ variable nature have been evaluated in the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) context. The analysis considers the period between 1960 and 2020 based on hourly reanalysis data (i.e., near-surface shortwave irradiation, wind speed, and air temperature) and the Hurrel NAO index. The findings show an in-phase relationship between solar power and winter NAO index, particularly over the coastal regions in western North Africa and opposite patterns in its eastern part. For wind energy, the connection with NAO has a more zonal pattern, with negative correlations in the north and positive correlations in the south. Solar energy droughts dominate northern Tunisia, Algeria, and Morocco, while wind energy droughts mainly occur in the Atlas Mountains range. On average, solar energy droughts tend not to exceed 2–3 consecutive days, with the longest extending for five days. Wind energy droughts can be as prolonged as 80 days (Atlas Mountains). Hybridizing solar and wind energy reduces the potential for energy droughts significantly. At the same time, the correlation between ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Jurasz, J.
Guezgouz, M.
Campana, P.E.
Kaźmierczak, B.
Kuriqi, A.
Bloomfield, H.
Hingray, B.
Canales, F.A.
Hunt, J.
Sterl, S.
Elkadeem, M.R.
spellingShingle Jurasz, J.
Guezgouz, M.
Campana, P.E.
Kaźmierczak, B.
Kuriqi, A.
Bloomfield, H.
Hingray, B.
Canales, F.A.
Hunt, J.
Sterl, S.
Elkadeem, M.R.
Complementarity of wind and solar power in North Africa: Potential for alleviating energy droughts and impacts of the North Atlantic Oscillation
author_facet Jurasz, J.
Guezgouz, M.
Campana, P.E.
Kaźmierczak, B.
Kuriqi, A.
Bloomfield, H.
Hingray, B.
Canales, F.A.
Hunt, J.
Sterl, S.
Elkadeem, M.R.
author_sort Jurasz, J.
title Complementarity of wind and solar power in North Africa: Potential for alleviating energy droughts and impacts of the North Atlantic Oscillation
title_short Complementarity of wind and solar power in North Africa: Potential for alleviating energy droughts and impacts of the North Atlantic Oscillation
title_full Complementarity of wind and solar power in North Africa: Potential for alleviating energy droughts and impacts of the North Atlantic Oscillation
title_fullStr Complementarity of wind and solar power in North Africa: Potential for alleviating energy droughts and impacts of the North Atlantic Oscillation
title_full_unstemmed Complementarity of wind and solar power in North Africa: Potential for alleviating energy droughts and impacts of the North Atlantic Oscillation
title_sort complementarity of wind and solar power in north africa: potential for alleviating energy droughts and impacts of the north atlantic oscillation
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 1481
url https://pure.iiasa.ac.at/id/eprint/19288/
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rser.2023.114181
genre North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
genre_facet North Atlantic
North Atlantic oscillation
op_relation Jurasz, J., Guezgouz, M., Campana, P.E., Kaźmierczak, B., Kuriqi, A., Bloomfield, H., Hingray, B., Canales, F.A., et al. (2024). Complementarity of wind and solar power in North Africa: Potential for alleviating energy droughts and impacts of the North Atlantic Oscillation. Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews 191 e114181.
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rser.2023.114181
container_title Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews
container_volume 191
container_start_page 114181
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