February 5, 2026
Journal Article
Mitigating Urban Climate-Energy Feedback with Citywide Building-Integrated Photovoltaics Implementation
Abstract
Urban heat islands (UHI) intensify cooling demands, whose waste heat further exacerbates UHI, creating a self-reinforcing feedback loop. Building-Integrated Photovoltaics (BIPV) can break this cycle by generating electricity and altering urban climate-energy interactions, yet its net impact remains unresolved. Using a cross-scale modelling framework for 118,521 buildings in Hong Kong, we demonstrate that BIPV glazing reduces cooling demand through improved insulation and lower solar heat gain, while inducing diurnal thermal asymmetry of daytime warming (up to +1.9?) and nighttime cooling (up to -2.5?). This microclimate regulation indirectly contributes to a 0.6% reduction in total energy use. Cumulative savings from electricity generation and reduced building energy use reach 4.7% (2060.2 GWh) and 10.1% (4401.3 GWh) under low- and high-coverage deployment, respectively, with building-level savings of -20.1%±11.7% (mean±s.d.) at high coverage. We establish BIPV as a configurable climate-energy regulator that enables net-zero, heat-resilient planning and quantifies deployment trade-offs in cooling-dominated cities worldwide.Published: February 5, 2026