Solar Production Data For Adelaide And Other Cities

Richard
Stellar
5 Replies 12759 Views

SOLAR PRODUCTION DATA FOR ADELAIDE AND OTHER CITIES

 

Updated to 31 March 2020

 

INTRODUCTION

 

I am a retired electrical engineer and have compiled a spreadsheet based on 6.36 years of solar power generation in the Adelaide area.  We have 5.2 kW of panels on the roof, consisting of 20 REC 260 PE watt panels facing north at an angle of 27.5° above the horizontal, and with no shading. 

 

For the period from 17/11/2013 to 21/05/2017, I have used the daily solar energy production data from our original solar SMA 5000TL-21 inverter, downloaded via Bluetooth.   This inverter had an absolute maximum power output of 5.0 kW.

 

For the period from 26/05/2017 to 31/10/18, I have used the csv daily solar energy production data in AGL’s Solar Command from our Sunverge VPP DC coupled battery system.   This inverter had an absolute maximum power output of 4.7 kW.

 

Since 01/11/18, I have used the csv daily solar energy production data from our Fronius Primo inverter from solar.web.   This inverter has an absolute maximum power output of 5.0 kW.

 

I have also extrapolated the Adelaide data to Brisbane, Canberra, Darwin, Hobart, Melbourne, Newcastle, Perth and Sydney.  I have done this by using Bureau of Meteorology (BOM) average monthly solar radiation data (kW/m2) for each of the cities, and then scaling my Adelaide empirical monthly data accordingly.  I have also taken the BOM monthly average maximum temperatures and adjusted for the negative temperature coefficient of solar panels.  Finally, I have adjusted for latitude and longitude by using Clean Energy Council guidelines for direction and panel angle data.

 

It is important to understand that the power rating given by the manufacturers of solar panels will be an idealised number, and that the real power will be less than stated.  Also, the power output of solar panels typically decreases by between 0.4% and 0.5% for every degree centigrade rise in temperature above 25° C, so cool bright days are the best.  Roof mounted panels parallel to the roof can be expected to be 35 C° above the ambient temperature, so on a 40° C day in Adelaide, the panel temperature could be 75° C.  This is 50 C° above the test temperature of 25°C, leading to a decrease in power output of 20% to 25%.  Output also decreases as the panels age with time, albeit measured in decades for quality panels.

 

RESULTS

 

I have averaged the daily energy produced on a monthly, seasonal and annual basis, and have also included standard deviations.  Standard deviation is a measure of the spread of a set of numbers around the average of that set.  This gives an indication of how scattered the values are and how repeatable the values might be over time, in that the smaller the standard deviation, the more the values cluster around the average.  As a rough guide, 68% of the daily production numbers will fall within one standard deviation of the average, and 95% will fall within two standard deviations of the average.  As an example, January has a daily average of 28.1 kWh over the 217 total January days studied, with a standard deviation of 7.5.  This means approximately that 68% of all the January values will fall between 20.6 and 35.6 kWh, and 95% of all the January values will fall between 13.0 and 43.1 kWh.

 

The solar energy production numbers in this document have all been generated from the one set of solar panels, but from three different inverter systems.  Given that the energy generated is dependent on both the panels and the power conversion efficiency and maximum output of the inverter, I have summarised the statistics of all three inverters in Table 1 to show the consistency of the inverters.

 

Table 1.jpg

As an aside, these numbers are now sufficiently large to suggest the Fronius Primo inverter is more efficient than both the Sunverge and the SMA inverter.  The average daily production for the Fronius Primo is 9.8% higher than the Sunverge and 6.4% higher than the SMA, even though the Fronius maximum is significantly lower than the other two.  The median for the Fronius Primo is also significantly higher than the other two, and the consistent standard deviations imply radiation consistency over the three different time periods.

 

The following tables and histograms summarise the data over the different intervals.

 

Table 2, 3 and 4.jpg

Monthly.jpg

 

Seasonal.jpg

 

SUMMER:           December, January and February.

AUTUMN:           March, April and May.

WINTER:              June, July and August.

SPRING:               September, October and November.

 

Annual.jpg

 

The annual data histogram above shows only complete calendar years, and the general consistency of the annual data suggests that those wishing to predict their own future energy production in Adelaide from this data could do so fairly reliably.

 

To facilitate your own calculation, Table 5 shows the estimated daily production figures for each month of the year, plus the estimated total annual output, based on solar panel installations from 1 to 10 kW, with summaries for north, east, south and west facing panels.

 

Table 5.jpg

The most common roof pitches in Australia are flat, 15° and 22.5°.  My north facing roof pitch is 22.5°, but the panels have been raised slightly to have a pitch of 27.5°.  If your panels are not at a pitch of 27.5°, or not facing north, east, south or west, you may need to make some adjustments to my data.  The optimum pitch angle above the horizontal for solar panels is the latitude, which is 34.9° here in Adelaide.  There are many articles on the web, such as solar panel orientation and solar panel angle, which discuss corrections for angle of pitch and direction.

 

Table 6 below is from the Clean Energy Council guidelines for direction and panel angle and details the effect of pitch and direction on annual daily irradiation on an inclined plane expressed as a percentage of the maximum value, where north facing (0 degrees direction) at a pitch of 30 degrees is the maximum for Adelaide.

 

Table 6.jpg

 

EXTRAPOLATIONS

 

Table 7 to 11.jpg

The Tables 7 and 9 above show the BOM monthly and annual solar radiation and temperature data.

Table 8 shows the solar radiation percentage variation relative to the BOM Adelaide values.

Table 10 shows the monthly and annual average maximum temperature differences relative to Adelaide.

Table 11 shows the temperature percentage variation relative to the BOM Adelaide values using a negative temperature coefficient of -0.4% per centigrade degree.

Table 12.jpg

Table 12 above shows the variations associated with solar panels at a pitch of 30° above the horizontal, and the variations associated with direction, latitude and longitude, from Clean Energy Council guidelines for direction and panel angle.

 

The following tables show the adjusted results for each city, based on observed and adjusted Adelaide data.

Tables 13 and 14.jpg

Tables 15 and 16.jpg

Tables 17 and 18.jpg

Tables 19 and 20.jpg

7 REPLIES 7
Margaret-Paul
Switched-on
1 Reply 10314 Views

Hi Richard,

Thank you for the excellent data and analysis.

Would you be willing to share data at a shorter time interval? I would like to do some analysis comparing generation to usage at the quarter hourly scale.

Your comparison across inverters is very insightful.

best wishes for 2022

Paul and Margaret

 

Richard
Stellar
1 Reply 10281 Views

Hi guys,

 

I'd be happy to talk to you.

It would best if you could ring me Cheers,

 

Richard

Margaret-Paul
Switched-on
0 Replies 10125 Views

HI Richard,

Sorry, but we were not able to connect on the phone number below.

Could you contact me on email. Thanks and looking forward to chatting about solar data.

Paul and Margaret

 

David_AGL
AGL Community Manager
0 Replies 10015 Views

Just snipping some private contact details out of this discussion for security. Because this is a public community, it's a good idea to use the private message function to share this kind of info with each other.

Will425
Switched-on
0 Replies 9575 Views

Hi Richard,

 

My name is Will and I am a year 12 student from South Australia. I am currently undergoing a course called the research project (10 credits towards my SACE) and am focusing on solar energy and its function (how it works and the rate of production in which it produces electricity in households). After reading your piece on solar energy production statistics in Adelaide and other cities, I would appreciate it if you could contact me privately via my email below so I can ask some further questions that I might be able to use in junction with your statistical observations for my research.

 

Thank you for the excellent discussion you have produced and I hope to hear from you soon. It would be very much appreciated if you were to get back to me at some point within the next week or so.

 

Kind regards,

 

Will Jordan (Email: Willjordan425@gmail.com)

John-T
Powerhouse
0 Replies 8179 Views

@Richard That is some nice work,  i am in NSW. I have just put up a 8,58KW PV System with 3 phase Fronius Symo 8.2kw inverter & Powerwall 2.

 

Would not mind having a chat to you at some point.

 

Cheers Mate   

John-T
Powerhouse
0 Replies 8140 Views

@Richard I am in an outer suburb of Sydney with a Latitude of 33.7 and my roof pitch is 22.5 all my panels are on my true North facing roof at the same pitch, what data can you glean from that. ? Trying to do the numbers is doing my head in.

 

Kind Regards.

John