Solar and wind energy resources of the Eger Region

  • János Mika Eszterházy College, Eger, Hungary
  • Edina Kitti Csabai Eszterházy College, Eger, Hungary
  • Ildikó Dobi Hungarian Meteorological Service, Budapest, Hungary
  • Zsófia Molnár Hungarian Meteorological Service, Regional Centre, Miskolc, Hungary
  • Zoltán Nagy Hungarian Meteorological Service, Budapest, Hungary
  • András Rázsi Eszterházy College, Eger, Hungary ; Hungarian Meteorological Service, Regional Centre, Miskolc, Hungary
  • Zsuzsanna Tóth-Tarjányi Hungarian Meteorological Service, Budapest, Hungary
  • Ilona Pajtók-Tari Eszterházy College, Eger, Hungary
Keywords: global radiation, wind energy, Eger Region, annual cycle, climate change

Abstract

The spatial interpolation and mapping of renewable energy resources is an important task of potential estimation of atmospheric renewable energy sources. First the global radiation on horizontal surfaces and near-surface wind speed at 10 m height above the surface (not at 60-120 m, which is the height of contemporary wind turbines) is measured. Based on standard meteorological observations, the experts of the Hungarian Meteorological Service elaborated a series of digital maps with 0.1°×0.1° resolution. The grid-point values are based on homogenised data using MASH theory and software. The study tackles solar and wind energy from four aspects. Firstly, a trial for validation of the gridded data is provided by a comparison between a single station, Eger and the very closely located grid-point values. Secondly, the annual cycles of the areal-mean global radiation and wind speed are presented, based on the gridded data of a selected area of 50×50 km. Both the averages and the standard deviations of the diurnal mean values are presented for the 1981-2010 reference period. Presenting the maps of the distribution within the area is the third issue with average and standard deviation values. Finally, the point-wise trends are drawn for both energy sources in the single grid-point used in the aspect one in 1981-2010 and also in the nearby located stations for comparison. The trend of solar energy is positive, whereas the trend for wind energy (speed cube) is negative in the given 30 year period. Since, mainly warming characterised those three decades in the Northern Hemisphere, the trends might also be interpreted as responses to the large-scale forcing, though the observed behaviour does not necessarily mean causal relationship with the global tendencies.

References

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IPCC 2013. Climate Change 2013. The Physical Science Basis. Final version. htt p://www. ipcc.ch/report/ar5/wg1/) 2260 p.

Prescott, J.A. 1940. Evaporation from a water surface in relation to solar radiation. Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia 64. 114-118.

Szentimrey, T. 1999. Multiple Analysis of Series for Homogenization (MASH). Proceedings of the Second Seminar for Homogenization of Surface Climatological Data. Budapest; WMO, WCDMP-No. 41. 27-46.

Szentimrey, T. and Bihari, Z. 2006. MISH (Meteorological Interpolation based on Surface Homogenized Data Basis). In The use of GIS in climatology and meteorology. Eds. Tveito, O.E. et al. COST Action 719. Final Report,. The use of GIS in climatology and meteorology. Eds. Tveito, O.E. et al. 54-56.

Published
2014-04-03
How to Cite
MikaJ., CsabaiE. K., DobiI., MolnárZ., NagyZ., RázsiA., Tóth-TarjányiZ., & Pajtók-TariI. (2014). Solar and wind energy resources of the Eger Region. Hungarian Geographical Bulletin, 63(1), 17-27. https://doi.org/10.15201/hungeobull.63.1.2
Section
Studies on renewable energies, GIS and climatology