Difference between revisions of "Solar Home System (SHS) - Climate Protection"
From energypedia
***** (***** | *****) m |
***** (***** | *****) m |
||
Line 25: | Line 25: | ||
<references /> | <references /> | ||
− | [[Category: | + | [[Category:Climate_Change]] |
+ | [[Category:Impacts_Ecological]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Solar_Home_Systems_(SHS)]] |
Revision as of 14:18, 5 June 2012
Green House Gas (GHG) Reduction Potential of Solar Home Systems (SHS)
"Savings of 9 tonnes of CO2 equivalent GHG emissions within a 20-year period of use of one single 50 Wp SHS"; => 0.45 t CO2/year[1]
"Typical SHS of 10-50 Wp will directly displace roughly 0.15-0.30 tons of CO2 per year through fuel substitutions mostly of kerosene."[2]
"During a previous analysis of 8 case studies, it was found roughly 0.25 tons of CO2 per average system of 44 Wp per year would represent a conservative but reasonable global value. […] 70% of the analysed emission reductions were actually higher than 250 kg."[3]
Further Reading
- Posorski, Rolf et al.: Does the use of Solar Home Systems (SHS) contribute to climate protection?, 2002, Renewable Energy, Volume 28, Number 7, June 2003, pp. 1061-1080 (20).
- REPP: Steven Kaufman: Rural Electrification with Solar Energy as a Climate Protection Strategy, Research Report No. 9, 2000.
- Martens et al. (2001): Towards a streamlined CDM process for Solar Home Systems.
References
- ↑ Posorski, Rolf et al.: Does the use of Solar Home Systems (SHS) contribute to climate protection?, 2002, Renewable Energy, Volume 28, Number 7, June 2003, pp. 1061-1080 (20).
- ↑ REPP: Steven Kaufman: Rural Electrification with Solar Energy as a Climate Protection Strategy, Research Report No. 9, 2000.
- ↑ Martens et al. (2001): Towards a streamlined CDM process for Solar Home Systems.