| Literature DB >> 24132939 |
Alona Armstrong1, Susan Waldron, Jeanette Whitaker, Nicholas J Ostle.
Abstract
Global energy demand is increasing as greenhouse gas driven climate change progresses, making renewable energy sources critical to future sustainable power provision. Land-based wind and solar electricity generation technologies are rapidly expanding, yet our understanding of their operational effects on biological carbon cycling in hosting ecosystems is limited. Wind turbines and photovoltaic panels can significantly change local ground-level climate by a magnitude that could affect the fundamental plant-soil processes that govern carbon dynamics. We believe that understanding the possible effects of changes in ground-level microclimates on these phenomena is crucial to reducing uncertainty of the true renewable energy carbon cost and to maximize beneficial effects. In this Opinions article, we examine the potential for the microclimatic effects of these land-based renewable energy sources to alter plant-soil carbon cycling, hypothesize likely effects and identify critical knowledge gaps for future carbon research.Entities:
Keywords: greenhouse gases; land use change; microclimate; solar parks; wind farms
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24132939 PMCID: PMC4255238 DOI: 10.1111/gcb.12437
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Chang Biol ISSN: 1354-1013 Impact factor: 10.863
Fig. 1(a) Schematic of the potential effects of wind turbines on air flow, temperature and evapotranspiration during the day with a stable atmospheric boundary layer and at night with an unstable atmospheric boundary layer. The pink (lighter grey) background represents warmer air and blue (darker grey) cooler air. Pink dashed arrows indicate warmer air eddies, which downwind of the turbine are mixed into the cooler air, thus increasing night-time surface temperature. Conversely, the blue solid arrows symbolize cooler air eddies which cause a cooling at the surface during the day-time. The horizontal arrows symbolize the wind speed up and downwind of the turbines, with a reduction in wind speed during the day and night. The vertical arrows suggest hypothesized changes in evapotranspiration, with increases under stable conditions and decreases under unstable conditions downwind of the turbine. (b) Schematic of the potential effects of solar panels on precipitation distribution; incoming shortwave (SI), reflected shortwave (SR) and diffuse shortwave (SD) radiation (solid red arrows); incoming (LI) and emitted (LE) longwave radiation (dashed black arrows) and conductance (C). The amount of SR will be lower for the photovoltaic (PV) panels, compared with the ground surface, given their lower albedo. The ratio of SD to SI will be greater under the PV as while SD will be reduced nearly all SI will be intercepted by the PV panel. The area under the PV panel is hypothesized to be warmer as a result of LE from the panel, leading to greater conductance into the soil (however, this will be dependent on the effects of the PV panels on wind). Finally, the PV panel will intercept precipitation, concentrating the inputs at the lower edge of the PV panel.
Fig. 2Direct (dashed arrows) and indirect (dotted arrows) effects of LBR-induced changes in microclimate on terrestrial C cycling and feedbacks to global change (solid arrows). Direct effects include the influence of temperature, soil moisture and radiation on plant community composition and productivity, and on soil microbial activity. Indirect effects result from changes in the soil microbial community caused by alteration of soil physico-chemical conditions and C inputs to the soil, mediated through changes in plant community composition and productivity.