Our rooftops hold the potential for the world's energy

Publicly released:
Australia; International

The amount of energy that rooftop solar could potentially provide is more than the world’s total energy consumption in 2018, according to international researchers, who found Australia and NZ to be among countries with the lowest cost for meeting the potential. The team mapped out 130-million square km of global land surface, and identified 0.2 million square km of rooftops that could be used for solar panels. They calculated that these rooftops could generate 27 petawatt-hours per year, with the greatest energy-generation potential in Asia, North America and Europe. The researchers say the cost would be US$40-280 per megawatt-hour, with India and China the cheapest (US$66 and US$68 per megawatt-hour, respectively) and UK and USA among the most costly (US$251 and US$238 per megawatt-hour). Australia and New Zealand sit at the lower end of these costs at US$90 per megawatt-hour.

Media release

From: Springer Nature

Energy: Global energy generation from rooftop solar photovoltaics assessed

A global assessment of the electricity generation potential of rooftop solar photovoltaics (PV) technology is reported in Nature Communications this week.

Rooftop solar photovoltaics (PV) technology, such as solar panels used in private, commercial and industrial buildings, is currently the fastest deployable energy generation technology and is projected to supply 25–49% of global electricity needs by 2050. Despite these predictions, a global assessment of the technology’s electricity generation potential and the associated costs remains a challenge.

Siddharth Joshi and colleagues employed a modelling framework to assess the electricity generation potential of rooftop solar PV technology globally and the associated costs. The authors mapped 130 million km2 of global land surface area to identify 0.2 million km2 of rooftop area using a machine learning algorithm. This rooftop area was then analysed to document the global electricity generation potential of rooftop solar PV technology.  The authors found that a global potential of 27 petawatt-hour per year can be attained at a cost of between US$40–280 per megawatt-hour with the greatest energy generation potential in Asia, North America and Europe. They indicate that the lowest cost for attaining the potential energy is in India (US$66 per megawatt-hour) and China (US$68 per megawatt-hour), while the UK and USA are among the most costly countries. The authors suggest that the energy generation potential of rooftop solar PV technology exceeded the global yearly aggregated energy consumption in 2018. However, its future potential will depend on the development and cost of storage solutions for the generated energy.

The authors conclude that their findings will have important implications for sustainable development and climate change mitigations efforts.

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Journal/
conference:
Nature Communications
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: University College Cork, Cork, Ireland
Funder: S.J., B.O.G. and J.G. are supported by a research grant from Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) under the SFINSFC Partnership Programme Grant Number 17/NSFC/5181. S.M. acknowledges support from the H2020 European Commission Project ‘PARIS REINFORCE’ under Grant Agreement no. 820846.
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