In the hyper-arid deserts of the United Arab Emirates (UAE), water is scarce but sunshine is bountiful. The oil-rich nation
In a new study, researchers at the University of Hohenheim in Germany show that vast arrays of solar panels have the potential to foster rainclouds above the UAE and bring much-needed water to tens of thousands of people.
The logic behind the idea goes like this: dark-colored solar photovoltaic panels absorb heat and, if large enough in scale, can create “artificial heat islands” in local areas. With the help of the UAE’s sea breeze, the warmth could be drifted upwards via convection and promote
Using computer models, the team ran several simulations to see how big the solar farm would need to be to have the desired effect.
The modeling suggested a 10-kilometer square (3.8 square miles) field of black solar panels would have “very little impact” on rainfall. Upwards of this though,
A 20-square-kilometer (7.7 square miles) solar panel field would create around 570,000 cubic meters each day of rain. If this occurred for just 10 days in a year, it could provide enough water for over 31,000 people annually.
As for a 50-square-kilometer (19 square miles) solar field, this would create enough rain to provide 125,000 extra people with water each year.
“Some solar farms are getting up to the right size right now. Maybe it’s not science fiction that we can produce this effect,” Oliver Branch, lead study author and climate scientist at the University of Hohenheim, told
It’s an extremely creative solution, but it might not work for every region of the world that’s facing water stress. Another
This latest proposal is effectively a form of
As the 2020 Sahara study shows, interfering with complex systems, such as Earth’s climate, can easily
The new study is published in the journal