Smart Energy and Environmental Research Unit (SEE-U), School of Renewable Energy, Maejo University, Chiang Mai, Thailand
BibTex Citation Data :
@article{IJRED61952, author = {Panuwit Puttaraksa and Thanyaluk Sundach and Sulaksana Mongkon and Chawaroj Jaisin and Sarawut Polvongsri}, title = {Towards low-carbon and net-zero energy temperature control in winter cricket farming using a hybrid PV/T–heat pump system}, journal = {International Journal of Renewable Energy Development}, volume = {15}, number = {3}, year = {2026}, keywords = {Heat pump; PV/T system; Cricket farming; Energy consumption; Carbon reduction}, abstract = { This study evaluated the integration of a photovoltaic–thermal (PV/T) system with a heat pump (HPs) to reduce energy consumption and carbon intensity in a community-scale cricket farming facility during the winter season. Two configurations were compared: a conventional HPs-only system and a hybrid HPs–PV/T system maintaining the rearing temperature at 28–30 °C. In the hybrid setup, a 10.8 kW th heat pump served as the main heating unit, while eight 550 W p PV/T panels supplied supplementary heat and electricity. The system performance was experimentally assessed, yielding an average heat-pump Coefficient of Performance (COP) of 3.13 and a PV/T performance ratio (PR) of 0.90 under winter conditions. The hybrid system reduced grid-electricity use to 1.58 kWh/day compared with 24.37 kWh/day in total consumption, achieving a 95.4% grid electricity displacement. Annually, the PV/T array generated 7,570.63 kWh of renewable energy—exceeding the total electricity demand of 7,369.07 kWh/yr. The organizational carbon-footprint analysis showed emissions declined from 5,025.98 kg CO₂e to 1,525.83 kg CO₂e, a 69 % reduction. Overall, the HPs–PV/T hybrid configuration proved to be an energy-efficient, low-carbon solution for temperature-controlled insect farming, particularly suitable for small- and community-scale applications. }, pages = {596--608} doi = {10.61435/ijred.2026.61952}, url = {https://ijred.cbiore.id/index.php/ijred/article/view/61952} }
Refworks Citation Data :
This study evaluated the integration of a photovoltaic–thermal (PV/T) system with a heat pump (HPs) to reduce energy consumption and carbon intensity in a community-scale cricket farming facility during the winter season. Two configurations were compared: a conventional HPs-only system and a hybrid HPs–PV/T system maintaining the rearing temperature at 28–30 °C. In the hybrid setup, a 10.8 kWth heat pump served as the main heating unit, while eight 550 Wp PV/T panels supplied supplementary heat and electricity. The system performance was experimentally assessed, yielding an average heat-pump Coefficient of Performance (COP) of 3.13 and a PV/T performance ratio (PR) of 0.90 under winter conditions. The hybrid system reduced grid-electricity use to 1.58 kWh/day compared with 24.37 kWh/day in total consumption, achieving a 95.4% grid electricity displacement. Annually, the PV/T array generated 7,570.63 kWh of renewable energy—exceeding the total electricity demand of 7,369.07 kWh/yr. The organizational carbon-footprint analysis showed emissions declined from 5,025.98 kg CO₂e to 1,525.83 kg CO₂e, a 69 % reduction. Overall, the HPs–PV/T hybrid configuration proved to be an energy-efficient, low-carbon solution for temperature-controlled insect farming, particularly suitable for small- and community-scale applications.
Article Metrics:
Last update:
Last update: 2026-04-16 00:33:57
This journal provides immediate open access to its content on the principle that making research freely available to the public supports a greater global exchange of knowledge. Articles are freely available to both subscribers and the wider public with permitted reuse.
All articles published Open Access will be immediately and permanently free for everyone to read and download. We are continuously working with our author communities to select the best choice of license options: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC BY-SA). Authors and readers can copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format, as well as remix, transform, and build upon the material for any purpose, even commercially, but they must give appropriate credit (cite to the article or content), provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. If you remix, transform, or build upon the material, you must distribute your contributions under the same license as the original.
International Journal of Renewable Energy Development (ISSN:2252-4940) published by CBIORE is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.