Despite being a barren wasteland, the Sahara Desert is actually major real estate for companies involved in renewable energy.
But even as these companies develop it for solar green energy farms, they may also have another positive effect on the region.
Image courtesy: Flickr/Kent Larsson
The baking sun and harsh winds of the Sahara, combined with the few pockets of civilization occupying it, make for a perfect location for solar and wind farms. In fact, many large projects are already underway, attempting to use the desert to generate green energy. However, aside from its potential as a hub for eco-friendly projects, scientists have largely ignored what could happen once all these projects come into play.
In new research from the University of Illinois, it seems setting up solar and wind farms could actually benefit the Sahara desert region itself, aside from generating renewable energy. They calculated predictions of how the local temperature, precipitation, and vegetation would change if the entirety of the desert¡¯s 9 million square kilometres was blanketed in energy farms. They found that mega projects covering the whole desert could together generate as much electricity as the global energy budget of 2017.
¡°Our results obtained from experiments performed with a climate model suggest that, for installations of wind and solar farms with current conversion efficiency in the desert at a scale large enough to power the entire world, the impacts on regional climate would be beneficial rather than detrimental,¡± the study¡¯s authors wrote . ¡°This highlights that, in addition to avoiding anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuels and the resulting warming, wind and solar energy could have other unexpected beneficial climate impacts.¡±
In wind farms for instance, the turbine blades pull warmer air down to the surface of the desert. Meanwhile solar farms cover the surface of the desert, meaning more energy is absorbed rather than reflected. This makes the area hotter and wetter. Combine that with the effect of the wind farms and you have a twofold spike in rainfall, which also then boosts local vegetation. The cycle repeats, feeding off this vegetative growth, so the desert could eventually be irrigating itself.
There are a number of other factors to consider of course, like the fact that a project large enough to cover the whole Sahara would require significant investment from one or more companies. Not to mention the technical difficulties with setting up such a widespread energy farm. However, it still gives us the exciting possibility that one day we may actually see a Sahara Desert that¡¯s green and growing.