Investigation of the accuracy of historical irradiance products and interannual variability of solar irradiance using met office ground data

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Abstract

Met Office station data from 1980 to 2012 has been used to characterise the interannual variability of incident solar irradiance across the UK. The same data are used to evaluate four popular historical irradiance products to determine which are most suitable for use by the UK PV industry for site selection and system design. The study confirmed previous findings that interannual variability is typically 3-6% and weighted average probability of a particular percentage deviation from the mean at an average site in the UK was calculated. This weighted average showed that fewer than 2% of site-years could be expected to fall below 90% of the long-term site mean. The historical irradiance products were compared against Met Office station data from the input years of each product. This investigation has found that all products perform well. No products have a strong spatial trend. Meteonorm 7 is most conservative (MBE = -2.5%), CMSAF is most optimistic (MBE = +3.4%) and an average of all four products performs better than any one individual product (MBE = 0.3%).

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APA

Burgess, P., Vahdati, M., & Essah, E. (2015). Investigation of the accuracy of historical irradiance products and interannual variability of solar irradiance using met office ground data. In IET Renewable Power Generation (Vol. 9, pp. 405–411). Institution of Engineering and Technology. https://doi.org/10.1049/iet-rpg.2014.0386

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