Sustainable Zero-Carbon Solar Heating, Cooling and Power in Urban and Off-Grid Environments

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Title
Sustainable Zero-Carbon Solar Heating, Cooling and Power in Urban and Off-Grid Environments

CoPED ID
4d762dd6-f5ac-433e-a15f-b75f9209a29f

Status
Active


Value
No funds listed.

Start Date
Sept. 30, 2020

End Date
Dec. 31, 2024

Description

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In order to accelerate renewable-energy penetration and meet ambitious emissions targets that have been set, further research and innovation are required to promote technologies in high-density urban environments, where low-carbon renewable energy has a significant potential to displace and mitigate environmental issues associated with fossil-fuel use (emissions/other pollutants), as well as in off-grid communities and micro-grids in rapidly-growing regions with a substantial solar resource.
Two-thirds of Africa's population is still lacking access to electricity, 80% of which lives in rural areas. Off-grid, distributed solar-energy supply has the potential to help Africa eradicate energy poverty, increase living standards, boost economic growth, while avoiding pollution, enhancing security, resilience and sustainability. Hybrid photovoltaic-thermal (PVT) systems are highly-suitable solutions for meeting the complete energy needs of urban and off-grid environments, as they generate both electrical and thermal outputs from the same area with a higher total efficiency than separate, standalone systems, and can be readily integrated with other technologies (e.g. for cooling, water or storage) within wider, wholistic energy systems. PVT technology is considered superior in terms of energy density (by 15-20%), and can reduce emissions by 30-40%, space by 20-30%, and investment costs by 10-20% compared to equivalent side-by-side PV and solar-thermal systems delivering the same energy outputs. This project will investigate the potential of a disruptive solar PVT concept (under development in separate projects), capable of providing up to 34x more useful energy compared to standard PV and 1.5-2x more energy than conventional PVT panels per unit area, thus outperforming best-in-class panels at a cost competitive with low-cost panels with much lower performance. This would be an unparalleled solution for simultaneous heating/cooling, hot and/or clean water provision, alongside electricity generation, in area-constrained or hot/arid regions with a significant solar resource and fast-growing developing economies.

The aims are to assess the combined technological, economic, environmental and social potential of this PVT-technology integrated into combined heating/cooling/power systems, identifying the most promising solutions and operating strategies for achieving higher yields in targeted locations at low-cost, including solutions to address solar intermittency, e.g. energy/water storage. This will be achieved by integrating technology models with advanced economic and environmental sustainability assessment methodologies, holistic considerations of the status and trends of energy prices, technology developments, regional resources and policies. Cost-competitiveness analyses over conventional supplies will be conducted by accounting for energy-price and technology-cost projections. Emissions and environmental impacts will be assessed by using life-cycle sustainability assessments.
Case studies will be conducted in collaboration with partners Desolenator (SSCP proposed collaborative partner) and Solar-Polar, in two diverse and highly-transferable representative settings: 1) urban environments, to reduce reliance on electricity grid and promote solar penetration; 2) rural micro-grids, to enable clean and affordable energy supply in developing, energy-poor regions. Workshops are planned to collect locally-relevant data on weather, environment and energy-use, and engage diverse, local stakeholders to discuss social and legislative barriers from their perspectives.
The project will demonstrate the affordability and sustainability potential of solar PVTbased whole-energy solutions, provide guidance to interested stakeholders, and insights for investment and policy development

Imperial College London LEAD_ORG
Desolenator STUDENT_PP_ORG
Solar-Polar Limited STUDENT_PP_ORG

Christos Markides SUPER_PER
Jenny Nelson SUPER_PER

Subjects by relevance
  1. Sustainable development
  2. Solar energy
  3. Renewable energy sources
  4. Developing countries
  5. Energy policy
  6. Environmental issues
  7. Emissions
  8. Costs
  9. Environmental technology
  10. Energy technology
  11. Countryside
  12. Technology
  13. Urban environment
  14. Warehousing
  15. Regional development
  16. Energy resources
  17. Energy production (process industry)
  18. Development (active)

Extracted key phrases
  1. Sustainable Zero
  2. Carbon Solar Heating
  3. Wholistic energy system
  4. Carbon renewable energy
  5. Energy solution
  6. Affordable energy supply
  7. Energy penetration
  8. Energy density
  9. Complete energy need
  10. Energy price
  11. Energy output
  12. Energy poverty
  13. Useful energy
  14. Grid environment
  15. Disruptive solar PVT concept

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

UK Project Locations