PL EN
Does Climate Zone Determine Wind–Solar Complementarity? A Daily-Resolution Assessment for Renewable Energy Planning in Iraq (2020–2024)
 
More details
Hide details
1
Mustansiriyah University
 
2
Department of Remote Sensing and GIS, College of Science, University of Baghdad
 
These authors had equal contribution to this work
 
 
Corresponding author
TAGHREED ALI Abbas   

Mustansiriyah University
 
 
 
KEYWORDS
TOPICS
ABSTRACT
This study presents the first daily-resolution assessment of solar attenuation mechanisms across Iraq's climatic gradient using five years of ground-based observations (2020–2024) from the Iraqi Meteorological Organization and Seismology. Six novel analyses are applied to data from Basrah, Baghdad, Mosul, and Sulaymaniyah: extreme event characterisation, composite recovery curves, dust–rainfall separation via diffuse fraction validation, viable solar season length, rainfall intensity breakpoints, and daily Weibull wind fitting. Results reveal a pronounced north–south dichotomy: southern arid zones experience dust-dominated attenuation with rapid 1–2 day recovery, while northern Mediterranean zones face rainfall-driven suppression requiring 3–5 days storage autonomy. Diffuse fraction analysis confirms dust days elevate scattering to 0.48–0.56 (ΔDF = +0.27–0.31 vs. clear), mechanistically distinct from rain events (DF > 0.60). Wind–solar correlations are uniformly positive (r = +0.21 to +0.36, p < 0.001), refuting complementarity and confirming synchronous summer peaking via shamal circulation. Rainfall thresholds for 50% irradiance loss range from 6.8 mm/day (Basrah) to 9.2 mm/day (Mosul), directly informing battery autonomy sizing. A representative 10 kWh/day load requires 28.8 kWh storage in Basrah versus 71.9 kWh in northern cities. Daily Weibull fitting identifies Basrah as the only marginally viable wind site (92.8 W/m²). These findings establish a daily-resolution design framework for renewable integration in arid climates, demonstrating that climate-zone-specific battery storage, not wind hybridization is critical for winter grid reliability.
Journals System - logo
Scroll to top