An-Najah University Journal for Research - A (Natural Sciences)

Scopus

Scopus profile and journal metrics

This journal is indexed in Scopus. Use these metrics for a quick publishing snapshot, then open the Scopus page for the authoritative profile.

Scopus
An-Najah University Journal for Research - A (Natural Sciences) Indexed in Scopus since 2019
CiteScore 0.8
Indexed since 2019
First decision 5 Days
Submission to acceptance 160 Days
Acceptance to publication 20 Days
Acceptance rate 14%

SCImago

SCImago Journal Rank preview

Use SCImago when you want a quick visual view of the journal ranking profile and external discoverability signals.

An-Najah University Journal for Research - A (Natural Sciences) SCImago Journal & Country Rank

DOAJ

Directory of Open Access Journals listing

The DOAJ record is useful for readers, librarians, and authors who want a direct open-access directory entry for the journal.

DOAJ
An-Najah University Journal for Research - A (Natural Sciences) Open directory record
Original full research article

GIS and Analytical Hierarchy Process (AHP)-Based Solar Energy Suitability Mapping in Palestine

Published
2025-02-03
Pages
159 - 166
Full text

Keywords

  • Palestine
  • System
  • Analysis
  • information
  • Decision
  • Process
  • Geographic
  • Hierarchy
  • (MCDA);
  • Suitability
  • mapping;
  • (AHP);
  • Solar
  • energy;
  • (GIS);
  • Analytical
  • Multi-Criteria

Abstract

This research aims to develop a solar energy suitability (SES) map for the West Bank, Palestine, considering potential driving factors (criteria). This is particularly crucial due to the increasing population and constraints imposed by reliance on Israeli electrical supplies, which amount to approximately 93%. Nine criteria were selected and used including slope, aspect, hillshade, distance from electric connection points, elevation, distance from roads, distance from built-up areas, land uses, and administrative zones. Geographic Information System (GIS) and Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP) were used to develop the SES map. The study reveals that 41% of the West Bank is highly suitable for solar energy projects (SEPs), while 29% falls into very low to low suitability, and 30% moderately suitable. Notably, Qalqilya and Jenin governorates are highly suitable for SEPs, whereas Ramallah and Jerusalem are the least suitable for SEPs. By intersecting the SES map with the A, B, and C zones of the Oslo Accord, it is evident that approximately 44% of the highly suitable SES areas are located in the A and B zones. This makes expanding SEPs in these areas possible. Additionally, the highly SES areas are mainly located in open space areas, implying that developing SEPs therein is a viable future option. The results of this research will help different stakeholders select potential sites for feasible SEPs in Palestine.

Article history

Received
2024-09-24
Accepted
2024-12-15
Available online
2025-02-03
بحث أصيل كامل

GIS and Analytical Hierarchy Process (AHP)-Based Solar Energy Suitability Mapping in Palestine

Published
2025-02-03
الصفحات
159 - 166
البحث كاملا

الكلمات الإفتتاحية

  • Palestine
  • System
  • Analysis
  • information
  • Decision
  • Process
  • Geographic
  • Hierarchy
  • (MCDA);
  • Suitability
  • mapping;
  • (AHP);
  • Solar
  • energy;
  • (GIS);
  • Analytical
  • Multi-Criteria

الملخص

This research aims to develop a solar energy suitability (SES) map for the West Bank, Palestine, considering potential driving factors (criteria). This is particularly crucial due to the increasing population and constraints imposed by reliance on Israeli electrical supplies, which amount to approximately 93%. Nine criteria were selected and used including slope, aspect, hillshade, distance from electric connection points, elevation, distance from roads, distance from built-up areas, land uses, and administrative zones. Geographic Information System (GIS) and Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP) were used to develop the SES map. The study reveals that 41% of the West Bank is highly suitable for solar energy projects (SEPs), while 29% falls into very low to low suitability, and 30% moderately suitable. Notably, Qalqilya and Jenin governorates are highly suitable for SEPs, whereas Ramallah and Jerusalem are the least suitable for SEPs. By intersecting the SES map with the A, B, and C zones of the Oslo Accord, it is evident that approximately 44% of the highly suitable SES areas are located in the A and B zones. This makes expanding SEPs in these areas possible. Additionally, the highly SES areas are mainly located in open space areas, implying that developing SEPs therein is a viable future option. The results of this research will help different stakeholders select potential sites for feasible SEPs in Palestine.

Article history

تاريخ التسليم
2024-09-24
تاريخ القبول
2024-12-15
Available online
2025-02-03