1. Introduction
In a climate change context, the necessity of the implementation of adaptation and mitigation strategies is especially important in areas of enhanced vulnerability according to climate projections. The Mediterranean region has been identified as a particularly vulnerable area to climate change and is widely considered a climate hotspot since it gives an amplified climate signal [
1]. This is exacerbated in the Mediterranean islands, which are even more vulnerable due to their insular nature and external dependence on energy [
2,
3]. In this context, the European Commission declaration on clean energy [
4] has put the focus on European islands as the next potential forerunners in the transition.
A high share of renewable energies in each country portfolio, together with an international diffusion of renewable energy innovations, is required to decrease GHG (i.e., greenhouse gas) emissions in the short term, e.g., [
5,
6]. Renewable energy deployment in islands has additional benefits. Many islands show a limited connection to the continent and most of them depend on energy imports [
3]. Thus, the increase of local electricity from renewable energy sources favors energy independence from the outside and limits energy security issues [
3]. In this context, it is important to take into account that an increase in the renewable energy share necessarily entails an increase in the dependence on the atmospheric variables and their variability—which can be subjected to changes in future climate. Currently, regional climate models (RCMs) are the most sophisticated tool available that can be used to project relevant climate variables in order to assess energy potential in future climate scenarios.
Different works have analyzed energy resources and potential for wind and photovoltaic (i.e., PV) energy over the Euro-Mediterranean area in the future using climate simulations [
7,
8,
9,
10,
11,
12,
13,
14,
15]. In general, a certain increase is projected in wind potential in Northern Europe, in different emission scenarios, together with a reduction in the Mediterranean areas [
8]. In the case of solar potential, a slight decrease is projected in the Mediterranean region by RCMs simulations [
9,
16]. However, models do not converge towards a single response in regions of Central Europe [
15,
17]. An important factor that could explain the observed discrepancies may be aerosol evolution, which is not considered in all climate simulations. While a robust ensemble of climate simulations including aerosol evolution would certainly improve estimations on photovoltaic potential, this is currently not available since model runs including aerosols are still scarce.
Many works have focused on the examination of energy potential changes [
7,
8,
9,
12,
13,
15]. However, all of them are focused on changes in energy potential over continental Europe and very little attention is given to insular regions. Given that the climate in these peripheral regions could be substantially different from that from the continental areas of the countries they belong to, and offshore energy sources can be more necessary for the islands due to land surface restrictions, different approaches may be required for the energy transition. Therefore, an individual resource evaluation is required. In order to properly capture land–sea gradients, as well as the orographic effect on climate variables, an enhanced horizontal model resolution is needed. Consequently, results obtained making use of global climate models (GCMs) [
12,
13], have an insufficient resolution to be used to address the Mediterranean islands. In this case, high-resolution regional simulations such as those from the Euro-CORDEX project [
18] (i.e., horizontal resolution of 12 km) would allow for a more adequate characterization of climate variability in Mediterranean islands.
Because of the isolated nature of islands, the availability of marine resources is particularly important and promising due to the incipient deployment of offshore wind and solar technologies in the near future [
19,
20,
21,
22,
23,
24,
25]. These two technologies represent, up to now, a maturity stage that makes them more suitable than other offshore and/or floating technologies which will be more developed in the coming years [
26,
27]. Offshore technologies are advantageous for islands or countries with limited space for the installation of power generation plants. In addition, wind resources are greater over the sea and, for solar panels, there is an increase in cell performance due to the cooling effect of water and wind on PV cells [
28]. Despite some disadvantages that have to be overcome (corrosion problems due to salty water or the impact of waves on the installations), offshore PV is receiving growing interest, and has been already tested for a Mediterranean island (Malta) [
24] or in sea areas characterized by high waves [
23]. Previous works have analyzed the offshore wind resources over the Mediterranean area and their future projections [
29,
30], showing a general decrease in the central Mediterranean and an increase in the Aegean Sea and the Gulf of Lyons.
The aim of this work is to assess changes in a series of renewable energy indicators (both onshore and offshore), for the first time, focused on Mediterranean islands (see the considered islands and their location in
Figure A1 of
Appendix A). We do the calculations for a control time period (1986–2005), different future time periods (2046–2065 and 2081–2100) and RCPs (Representative Concentration Pathways). In particular, we consider the RCP2.6, a stringent mitigation scenario, and the RCP8.5, which assumes high GHG emissions (see [
31] for further details). To that end, we use climate variables from a set of high-resolution Euro-CORDEX simulations. The energy indicators considered here include solar and wind energy, which are presently (and probably in the future) the backbone of the deployment of renewable energies due to their technological maturity and low cost. Additionally, periods in which a deficit of solar or wind production occurs are also analyzed using a variability indicator to which we refer, following [
32], as energy productivity droughts. These provide an estimate of productivity variability over time and offer relevant information for mitigation purposes, since in future decarbonization scenarios the frequency and duration of droughts will determine the required energy storage and backup sources. Energy indicators are computed for the islands and also over the marine areas adjacent to them. Ensemble mean projected changes, as well as the uncertainties associated with those changes, are normalized. This allows us to assign scores that are useful to perform a straightforward comparison of the results obtained for the different islands. In this work—conducted in the context of the SOCLIMPACT H2020 project (DownScaling CLImate ImPACTs;
https://soclimpact.net)—we provide relevant information for decision-makers of the Mediterranean islands. We map and rank relevant indicators over land, but also over the sea, which is relevant for Blue Growth. The novelty of this work is based on several aspects. First, we exclusively focus on the study of the Mediterranean islands, instead of on continental Europe—as done in most of the previous studies that analyze renewable energy projections. Second, we make an intercomparison of a series of normalized energy indicators among islands in order to provide condensed insights regarding future changes in renewable productivity for policymakers and stakeholders. Third, most of the previous works are exclusively based on energy potential mean changes, whereas here we also make the effort to study variability changes through the analysis of energy productivity droughts. This article is structured as follows. In
Section 2, the methodology is presented. In
Section 3, the most relevant results are presented. The discussion and conclusions are offered in
Section 4.
4. Discussion and Conclusions
4.1. General Discussion
The strong need for increasing the contribution of renewable energy in the Mediterranean islands is being met presently to a very high degree through onshore wind and solar PV energy installations. This selection is supported by several reasons: the competitive and steadily decreasing price of energy from these mature technologies, the high potential in particular of PV energy over these islands, and the relatively low share of variable renewable energy sources in power production for most of them, which facilitates their integration in the power system. However, the need for very high renewable energy shares in the future and the possible impact of climate change on renewable energy resources are challenges that have to be tackled.
Regarding the latter issue, the future change of wind energy and PV productivity should be rather small in general: around 5% or less with respect to the reference period in many cases, with maximum changes of about 10% for some islands at the end of the century under RCP8.5 scenario (particularly for wind energy productivity over land). A 10% productivity change could have a significant impact on a planned or existing plant if it occurs over the lifetime of the power plant, but in this case, such a change would extend over many decades, which will facilitate adaptation and efficiency measures.
Wind and solar PV energy are not dispatchable, and its variability represents a challenge for its integration in the power system. This is a challenge that can be addressed through storage or backup plants (which can be itself renewable energy plants), through demand management, but also taking advantage of the complementarity of PV and wind energy and their very different variability characteristics. In this study, we have measured this variability through the frequency of renewable energy droughts. Solar PV, with drought frequencies of 10% or less of the days, is clearly more stable and reliable than wind energy, which shows drought frequencies of about 50% of the days for most islands. Additionally, solar PV and wind energy show usually a clear seasonal complementarity, as seen in the example of Cyprus analyzed here, which is characteristic for most islands. The implications of the higher stability of solar PV and its complementarity with wind energy are being recognized by stakeholders in the islands, as demonstrated by the report by Monitor Deloitte and Endesa [
44], in which one of the key recommendations for achieving an accelerated zero carbon target in the Balearic Islands by 2040 is the combination of solar PV and wind energy, with clearly higher shares of PV than of wind energy. Our results show that projected changes in the frequency of droughts are small. This indicates that the time-variability characteristics of wind and PV energy are a robust feature.
Our analysis also includes offshore wind and solar PV technologies. The results confirm that offshore wind energy has a much higher potential in comparison to onshore wind energy. Even if future projections of offshore wind energy point also towards a limited decrease, the exploitation of this marine resource will imply in any case a large productivity improvement in comparison to land-based plants. Whereas offshore PV productivity does not show important differences in magnitude compared to land-based PV, offshore PV plants would be beneficial in small and/or densely-populated islands in which space is a limiting factor, such as Malta. In this respect, there is growing interest in offshore PV generation plants, as shown by the test plants being installed and the references made to this technology in the Roadmap for the Offshore Renewable Energy Strategy of the European Commission or in the report of [
44] about the accelerated decarbonization of the Balearic Islands. This suggests that offshore technologies could play a relevant role in the pathway towards very high or 100% RES shares required to (i) achieve the long-term EU decarbonization strategy, (ii) decrease the external energy dependency of insular regions (i.e., reduce their vulnerability) and (iii) mitigate the effect of climate change on renewable energy generation.
The combination of different types of offshore renewable energy sources on the same platform is also attracting interest, as the different sources can exhibit complementarity in time and the combined output can be thus more stable and reliable. The different renewable energy technologies can also share part of the installations, like the connection to land, reducing their cost [
45,
46]. The European Union is trying to promote such combinations, through projects like MUSICA (Multiple Use of Space for Island Clean Autonomy), which will design and test a floating offshore platform integrating wind, PV and wave energy for use on islands and plans to develop roadmaps for its deployment in three case study islands, among them Malta [
47].
Increasing RES shares together with a higher diversification of renewable technologies can limit the amount of power that needs to be imported to the islands through interconnections to the mainland. Interconnections are in principle very beneficial for supply safety, but excessive dependency on them should be nevertheless avoided, due to the risk of blackouts. The failure of a single element (one transmission line) can knock out instantaneously a large proportion of the power of an island and even cause an island-wide blackout, as has occurred several times in Malta in the last years.
4.2. Conclusions
In this work, we use high-resolution climate variables in order to compute a series of renewable energy indicators that allow us to assess the impact of climate change on renewable energy production, not only over the Mediterranean islands, but also over the marine areas adjacent to them, thereby encompassing a key aspect of the blue economy. In addition to wind and photovoltaic (PV) productivity, we also consider wind and PV productivity droughts, which are a measure of the variability of the resource.
Results for the control time period show a large spatial heterogeneity of wind energy productivity, with much larger values over the sea than over the islands. The maximum wind energy potential is found over Crete, which shows an atypical seasonal distribution with high summer values due to regional wind flow, and the Etesians. Solar PV productivity is spatially much more homogeneous, and is generally high in all the studied islands. Minimum values of PV potential are found in mountainous areas likely due to orographic-related cloud formation. The seasonal cycle of PV is always driven by an increase of solar irradiation in the central months of the year and presents little differences among regions.
Wind energy droughts are much more frequent (around 50% of the days for most islands) than PV droughts (10% or less of the days). This agrees with results from the study of [
32], and highlights the much more stable nature of PV productivity in comparison to wind productivity.
The future projections of the impact of climate change show that adaptation needs in the area of renewable energies will be rather limited. The future change of wind energy and PV productivity should be rather small in general, with maximum changes at the end of the century under the high-emissions RCP8.5 scenario. In general, projections show a decreasing trend of wind energy productivity, with a more important decrease in the RCP8.5 scenario. The main exception is Crete, which shows a consistent increasing tendency. Projected PV productivity changes are generally smaller than wind energy changes and, in most cases, PV productivity remains constant or slightly decreases.
Wind energy and PV productivity droughts will undergo generally rather small future changes. The sign of the changes in the frequency of wind energy droughts is linked to the sign of the productivity change, such that a productivity decrease (as obtained for most islands) is associated with an increase in the frequency of droughts. This is not found for PV productivity and droughts, which decrease simultaneously in several cases. This is due to the fact that the sharpest decrease in PV productivity occurs in summer and autumn when PV droughts do not develop. Therefore, even an annual mean decrease in PV productivity could drive a decrease in the frequency of PV droughts, as long as PV productivity increases in winter months.
The normalization of the changes and the associated uncertainties of the corresponding energy indicators provide condensed information that facilitates the intercomparison of the results obtained in the different islands. Combined with the use of an appropriate color code, tables of normalized scores provide a useful and direct way to communicate the impact of climate change on RES in the islands to policymakers and stakeholders.
There is a specific uncertainty source in PV projections over Europe. Most regional climate model simulations, including the ones used here, do not include a projected evolution of aerosols in future climate runs. The missed effect of the likely evolution of aerosols may increase to some degree the future surface solar radiation and PV productivity over most of the islands [
15]. This could cancel out the limited reduction of PV productivity obtained in the present study. Thus, a similar analysis to the one we perform, but done with RCMs simulations including evolving aerosols, could constitute an interesting follow-up when a large set of RCMs including aerosol evolution is available.