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Climate Risk Is Not a Future Problem for Your Solar Assets

A technician inspecting solar panels during a heatwave in a dusty, hot field
Heat-induced derating is the silent killer of project ROI.
Renewables have been touted as the silver bullet to tackling climate change, but can they withstand our warming planet?

The Reality of Performance Degradation

We spend our days obsessing over inverter efficiency curves and module power temperature coefficients, yet we treat 'local climate' as a static variable. That’s a dangerous oversight. As heatwaves become more frequent across Southern Europe—look at the 40°C+ spikes in Andalusia or the Po Valley—your P50 yield estimates are increasingly fiction.

The thermal reality: A standard monocrystalline PERC module loses about 0.35% to 0.40% in output for every degree Celsius above STC (25°C). In a prolonged 45°C summer, you aren't just losing output; you're accelerating the degradation of bypass diodes and junction box seals. If you’re spec’ing budget modules based on a 20-year warranty without accounting for increased thermal stress, you’re setting your client up for an O&M nightmare by year seven.

The Engineering Checklist for a Heating Planet

  • Upsize the cable cross-sections: With higher ambient temperatures, derating factors hit harder. Don't let your DC string losses eat your margins.
  • Inverter Placement: Stop hiding inverters in poorly ventilated, enclosed utility rooms. If the ambient temperature at the inverter exceeds 50°C, most Tier-1 brands like SMA or Fronius will throttle output to protect internal components.
  • Bifaciality is your shield: In high-heat regions, mounting height is the only way to manage convection. Raising your tilt and ground clearance allows for better airflow, which—counterintuitively—keeps the modules cooler and yields higher energy output than a fixed-tilt, low-profile array.

Stop selling based on historical irradiation data from 2010. If you aren't integrating climate-resilient design into your EPC contracts, you’re just selling a ticking liability. The market is shifting from 'kWh volume' to 'reliability under stress.' If your systems can't handle the heat, the insurance premiums on your commercial portfolios will eventually make your projects unbankable.

Why it matters: Stop designing for the climate of 2010; your systems need to survive the heatwaves of 2030 or your O&M costs will wipe out your profit.
📰 Read original article at Euronews Renewables →