Zum Inhalt springen

Light in the Crater: Leveraging Public Solar Hubs to Fund Mountain Resilience in the Italian Central Apennines

Prometheus Redaktion

1.2.1. Dynamic Evolution of the Apennine Socio-Ecological Systems In Italy, the Inner Areas represent geographically a strategic pillar of the national landscape, encompassing approximately 177,000 km 2 (roughly 59% of the national surface) and hosting over 13 million residents [ 4]. Characterized by high average elevations, with 42.4% of municipalities situated in hilly regions and complex topographies, they face systemic challenges in infrastructure and accessibility [ 5]. Despite their peripheral status relative to service provision centers, these territories are not merely empty spaces; they contribute significantly to the national economy through the cultural and creative sectors, which account for 6.1% of Italy’s national added value [ 6]. The National Strategy for Inner Areas (SNAI), approved with the European Commission Implementing Decision C (2022) 4787, constitutes the relative territorial policy for the 2020–2027 programming period, identifying marginalized municipalities based on specific accessibility parameters: health, education, and collective mobility, enclosing therefore 1904 municipalities with more than 4.5 million residents, over a surface of 94,000 km 2 [ 7, 8]. A foundational body of research has established a framework for assessing the environmental health of these fragile systems, identifying five critical pillars of landscape functionality: carbon sequestration, water availability, biodiversity, fire risk, and soil degradation [ 9]. While these parameters were originally synthesized to diagnose the impacts of land use modification in the Central Apennines, recent empirical evidence from the 2020–2026 period demands a refined understanding of their current trajectories. The most recent data indicates an alarming acceleration in the “management neglect paradox”. In terms of water availability, longitudinal studies in Central Italy document a significant reduction in the river runoff across all seasons between 1927 and 2020, alongside a decreasing trend in the runoff coefficient driven by thermal anomalies and shifting precipitation patterns [ 10]. Recent hydro-climatic analyses conducted in the Central Apennine Hydrographic District highlight a significant intensification of water stress, characterized by a paradoxical increase in the frequency and severity of meteorological drought periods, despite annual precipitation volumes remaining essentially stationary between 1965 and 2020. This trend is particularly marked on the Tyrrhenian coast, where the percentage of months experiencing severe drought has quadrupled over the last twenty years, from 5% to 24%, due to multidecadal oscillations that are placing increasing pressure on the resilience of regional aquifers [ 11]. This hydrological stress is mirrored in biodiversity dynamics ( Figure 2); the abandonment of traditionally managed wooded grasslands has reached a tipping point where shrub encroachment reduces light availability even beyond the canopy edge, displacing rare heliophilous specialists in favor of shade-tolerant pre-forest species [ 12]. Simultaneously, the unmanaged forest expansion, which has increased forest surface by 20% over the last 30 years, has transitioned from a carbon-positive asset to a liability [ 13, 14]. In the temperate regions of Central Italy, the escalation of wildfire risk is increasingly driven by prolonged drought periods that interact with specific landscape vulnerabilities, particularly in mountainous and hilly terrains where the forest matrix predominates [ 15]. Mapping these risks reveals that geomorphological factors (specifically southern exposures and slopes exceeding 15%) create zones of high susceptibility that demand targeted spatial planning. Within these areas, successional land covers such as shrublands and wastelands have emerged as highly fire-sensitive ecological units, underscoring the necessity of differentiating between vegetation types that exacerbate fuel hazards and those that could potentially be managed as natural mitigation agents [ 14]. Beyond the physical susceptibility of the terrain, the Italian wildfire crisis is exacerbated by a governance framework that prioritizes reactive emergency suppression over proactive prevention, a gap that is increasingly difficult to bridge as rural abandonment drives unprecedented fuel accumulation across the Apennine ridge [ 16]. Finally, soil degradation maintains a dominant negative trend; multi-temporal assessments using the Environmentally Sensitive Area Index (ESAI) in Latium (1960–2020) reveal a widening divergence in soil health between coastal and inland mountain districts, as millenary drainage and terrace systems collapse under neglect [ 17]. 1.2.2. Active and Passive Rewilding: Pros & Cons The depopulation of territories and the progressive abandonment of the cultivated soil have prompted a debate about the management of these areas [ 21, 22]. In particular, the discourse on passive rewilding in the Mediterranean mountains, and the Central Apennine ridge specifically, presents a multifaceted socio-ecological trajectory. On one hand, recent longitudinal evidence suggests that non-intervention can facilitate the restoration of carbon-rich, old-growth characteristics in Mediterranean mountain forests, potentially rebuilding mixed beech–silver fir ( Fagus sylvatica, Abies alba) systems that are more resilient to climatic shifts [ 23]. This successional process, in an experimental study in Mediterranean basin mountains, is accompanied by measurable gains in soil organic carbon stocks and microbial quality, which progressively improve as croplands transition into old-forest structures [ 24]. Furthermore, the successful dispersal of reintroduced wild ungulates, such as red deer, highlights the capacity of rewilding to support wildlife recovery, though their preference for forest edges suggests that a cultural mosaic rather than total canopy closure remains optimal for habitat functionality [ 25]. Conversely, the management neglect inherent in strict passive strategies triggers a critical conflict in these human-shaped landscapes. In areas such as the Abruzzo, Lazio, and Molise National Parks, an intense debate has emerged regarding the preservation of high-nature-value grasslands against the systemic expansion of unmanaged forests [ 26]. Theoretical perspectives argue that approaches aiming for strict non-intervention are conceptually inconsistent when applied to cultural ecosystems co-evolved with human agency over millennia. In this context, total land abandonment is increasingly viewed as suboptimal; it erodes landscape heterogeneity, displaces open-habitat specialists, and exacerbates wildfire hazards by allowing continuous fuel loads to accumulate [ 27]. Therefore, while passive rewilding offers distinct regulating benefits, its implementation in the Apennines must be balanced against the loss of the biodiversity-rich agricultural mosaics that define the region’s socio-ecological identity. 1.2.3. Socio-Economic Stewardship and the Anthropo-Systemic Value of the Apennines The preservation of the Central Apennine cultural landscape is fundamentally dependent on the maintenance of its anthropo-systemic value, the unique territorial capital, both tangible and intangible, that persists only through the continuous presence and active agency of local communities. Research within the 2016–2017 seismic crater area suggests that the withdrawal of human presence constitutes a net loss for the public budget, as the resulting destruction of territorial capital outweighs any immediate savings in service provision [ 28]. This valuation underscores the necessity of the SNAI, which seeks to counteract the marginalization of these zones by fostering integrated development models that address their structural distance from essential services. Several concrete economic pathways emerge from the literature and they involve tourism, agriculture and services sectors [ 29]. Agritourism and nature-based tourism are the most frequently cited opportunities. Agrotourism in European mountain areas can diversify farm income while preserving extensive agricultural landscapes [ 30]. The Rewilding Apennines initiative, recently selected for a five-year program under the Endangered Landscapes & Seascapes Program starting April 2026, explicitly aims to “support new economic opportunities linked to a healthier, more dynamic natural environment” alongside ecological restoration in the central Apennines [ 31]. Traditional and quality food products are another pillar. A University of Parma partnership in the Apennines worked to strengthen short supply chains for mountain farmers, showing that community–university collaboration can help overcome the isolation that makes these supply chains fragile [ 32]. From this was born the idea of a proximity economy model where minor food supply chains from fragile areas become drivers of local revitalization based on cooperation, reciprocity, and shared value creation [ 33]. Payments for ecosystem services represent a less developed but potentially transformative mechanism. A recent work (2022) identified specific agricultural practices that deliver bundles of ecosystem services across policy scenarios, particularly grazing-related practices: extending the grazing period, grazing in semi-natural and abandoned areas, adapting stocking rates, and seasonal transhumance [ 34]. These findings suggest that properly compensating farmers for landscape management could close the income gap that drives abandonment. Community-based cooperatives have emerged as an institutional innovation in Italian inner areas. An article reports that these enterprises, which pursue general interest and create local partnerships, can address the specific needs of depopulating communities and potentially reverse demographic decline by enhancing social, natural, and artificial capital [ 35]. 1.2.4. Feasibility of Photovoltaic Energy Development in Mountain Regions Current literature on renewable energy transitions in mountain regions highlights a significant spatial and multi-criteria trade-offs [ 36]. Studies conducted in the high-altitude environment of the Andean region consistently rank ground-mounted PV arrays lower than forest biomass or hydropower due to their substantial land-use footprint and negative impact on landscape heritage [ 37]. GIS-based studies in Polish mountains have shown that only about one-fifth of total incoming radiation can be converted to electricity in protected mountain areas, with annual solar potential ranging widely from 113 to 1314 kWh/m 2 [ 38]. Throughout the year, photovoltaic systems in highland regions in Europe and Lebanon demonstrated superior efficiency, with performance ratios spanning 73.73% to 88.64%. This trend suggests that lower ambient temperatures in these altitudes contribute to enhanced system output; consequently, the mean annual yield for the two locations in the Italian Alps ranges from 101.57 to 108.27 kWh/kWp [ 39]. Central Italy (roughly Lazio, Tuscany, Umbria, Marche, and not for specifically mountain areas; latitudes ~41–43°N) generally receives annual global horizontal irradiation (GHI) in the range of about 1400–1700 kWh/m 2/year, depending on altitude, coastal proximity, and local climate. For a well-oriented fixed PV system (typically about 30° tilt, south-facing), the in-plane irradiation is higher, and expected annual energy yields are roughly 1200–1500 kWh/kWp [ 40]. 1.3. Research Gap, Objectives, and Contributions This study hypothesizes that utilizing the newly reconstructed public building stock as a distributed photovoltaic infrastructure enables mountain municipalities to generate an economic surplus specifically allocated for active landscape maintenance. However, notable gaps remain in feasibility studies regarding PV development in the Central Apennines, particularly concerning how non-invasive solar portfolios can be integrated into post-disaster recovery frameworks. Furthermore, there is a lack of quantitative literature exploring how renewable energy revenues can be systematically redirected to counter land abandonment and fund landscape stewardship in socio-economically fragile, earthquake-stricken areas. To address these gaps, the primary aim of this study is to quantify the untapped solar potential of the public reconstruction sector within the Sibillini Mountains cluster and to propose a self-funding Stewardship-REC model. Secondary objectives include the evaluation of the potential economic revenue generated by energy sharing and the quantification of the resulting landscape Stewardship Capacity. To achieve these objectives, the research is guided by the following questions: RQ1: How is the solar potential spatially distributed across the seismic crater, and which municipalities can act as regional energy hubs? RQ2: Can the economic incentives derived from these public solar hubs provide sufficient financial coverage to support active landscape stewardship and Nature-Based Solutions (NbSs), particularly in high-risk landscape? RQ3: What is the realistic solar potential of the public reconstruction sector when filtered through a building-suitability proxy? The original contribution of this research lies in designing a model tailored for post-seismic areas, transforming structural repair into an engine for energy independence. This approach provides a novel, self-sustaining financial lever for the socio-economic and environmental recovery of territories at high risk of depopulation, offering a reproducible framework for policymakers, urban planners, and technicians operating in post-disaster contexts. 2. Materials and Methods This study selects the Sibillini Mountains (about 70,000 ha spanning the Marche and Umbria regions) as the pilot area for scientifically strategic reasons. This region serves as a living lab for the management neglect paradox, having been severely impacted by the 2016–2017 seismic sequence and being a focal point for the SNAI. The methodology adopts an integrated, multi-criteria approach to evaluate the feasibility of a REC as a financial engine for landscape stewardship in the Sibillini Mountains. To clarify the logical architecture of this study, Figure 3 illustrates the Stewardship-REC conceptual framework, divided into three sequential phases. The process initiates with Inputs, where post-seismic reconstruction funds act as a catalyst to unlock the untapped photovoltaic potential of damaged public buildings. This capitalizes on existing structural repair to install solar capacity without consuming new land. The core mechanism, or Engine, is driven by the establishment of a REC; here, the energy generated by the public nodes is shared, legally and economically generating a financial surplus through national incentive schemes (e.g., GSE tariffs). Finally, the Outputs translate this economic surplus into a Stewardship Capacity. These funds are ring-fenced for NbSs, specifically targeting the active maintenance of the Wildland–Urban Interface to mitigate wildfire risks and bolster the socio-economic resilience of territories threatened by depopulation. 2.1. Study Area: The Sibillini Mountains The pilot area encompasses the Monti Sibillini National Park and the surrounding municipalities within the 2016 seismic crater ( Table 1). This area ( Figure 4) is characterized by the following: Geographical map of the Sibillini Mountains area. Panel A provides the national context, where the red dot indicates the location of the study area within Italy, while Panel B details the boundaries of the investigated municipalities. Geographical map of the Sibillini Mountains area. Panel A provides the national context, where the red dot indicates the location of the study area within Italy, while Panel B details the boundaries of the investigated municipalities. 2.2. Module I: Spatial Identification of Energy Assets (GIS Analysis) and Rooftop Availability High-resolution remote sensing and cadastral data are utilized to identify two main energy features: PV Solar Radiation for the above-mentioned municipalities, considered under global irradiation optimum angle and calculated horizon for terrain shadow, using PVGIS-SARAH13 (EU joint Research Centre) for the period 2020–2023 (latest data available) [ 40]; PV Surfaces, mapping anthropo-systemic opportunities, including the rooftops of public seismic-damaged buildings and degraded/marginal surfaces identified for reconstruction. Seismic-damaged infrastructures are identified via Open Data Sisma 2016, specifically by mapping building rooftops within the 2016 seismic crater slated for public reconstruction or temporary stabilization [ 41]. These surfaces represent immediate opportunities for decentralized energy generation without further land consumption [ 42]. To operationalize the spatial potential into actionable energy metrics, the model assumes a standardized baseline installation of 20 kWp per public building. This specific threshold was strategically selected as it satisfies both spatial and regulatory imperatives. Architecturally, utilizing high-efficiency monocrystalline modules, a 20 kWp system requires approximately 100 to 120 m 2 of net unshaded area [ 43], which reflects the standard architectural typologies of Apennine public infrastructure (e.g., municipal halls, primary schools, and gyms) [ 44]. Administratively, under the Italian legislative framework, systems up to 20 kWp represent a critical bureaucratic cut-off: they are exempt from being registered as an Officina Elettrica (Electrical Workshop) with the Agenzia delle Dogane (Customs Agency), thereby avoiding fiscal metering obligations and annual fees [ 45]. Additionally, plants of this size benefit from highly simplified grid-connection procedures (Modello Unico) on standard low-voltage networks, making them the most frictionless and rapidly deployable asset class for understaffed municipal administrations. 2.3. Module II: The Energy-Stewardship Economic Loop This module models the financial mechanism through which the revenue generated by the REC is redirected to fund the operational costs of landscape maintenance, effectively decoupling territorial stewardship from volatile agricultural markets. 2.3.1. Revenue Modeling: The REC Financial Engine The economic output of the energy-sharing model is calculated based on the combined production from the PV and biomass assets identified in Module I. The revenue stream is defined by the current Italian regulatory framework of the Ministry of the Environment and Energy Security (MASE) [ 46] and the strategic priorities of the National Strategic Plan for Inner Areas (PSNAI) 2025 [ 8], focusing on two primary components: Incentivized Energy Sharing: revenue is derived from the sharing incentive for electricity produced and consumed within the community boundaries. For the Sibillini pilot area, a weighted average Incentive Rate has been applied, based on the latest ministerial decrees, accounting for the mountain correction factor intended to offset higher installation and maintenance costs in inner areas. System Charge Savings: the model incorporates the reduction in regional system charges and the valorization of energy injected into the grid. This creates a surplus fund specifically earmarked for the community’s general interest—in this case, the maintenance of the anthropo-systemic capital. 2.3.2. Operational Cost Modeling: Nature-Based Solutions The costs of active stewardship are quantified by evaluating the requirements of specific NbSs necessary to restore the High Nature Value cultural mosaic. Two primary interventions are prioritized: ▪ Rotational Grazing and Transhumance: costs include the management of livestock (shepherding labor, mobile fencing, and water supply) required to maintain open grasslands and prevent woody encroachment. Following the valuation models (Bernués et al. (2014); Zabala et al. (2021)), the estimation of the economic value of these agroecosystem services amounts to approximately EUR 120 per hectare/year, with a significant portion of the willingness to pay attributed to wildfire prevention and biodiversity conservation [ 47, 48]. ▪ Mechanical Mowing and Scrub Clearing: in areas where grazing is insufficient or labor is scarce, mechanical mowing is modeled to ensure the persistence of heliophilous plant species and forest-edge habitats. These costs are adjusted for the steep topography of the Sibillini ridge (slopes > 15%), which necessitates specialized equipment and higher labor intensity. To determine the financial requirements for territorial stewardship, the model adopts a conservative cost baseline for active landscape maintenance. The selected baseline of 1200 EUR/ha for Stewardship Capacity is grounded in current regional pricing standards in Central Italy. Specifically, the Official Price List of the Marche Region for Public Works (2024) cites a rate of 1227.11 EUR/ha (Item 12.03.012) for specialized mechanical mowing and pruning on embankments and verges, tasks technically comparable to the maintenance of firebreaks and steep mountain slopes [ 49]. This active service cost is significantly higher than agricultural subsidies, such as the 130 EUR/ha annual payment provided by the Marche Rural Development Complement 2023–2027 (Intervention SRA08) for the management of permanent pastures [ 50]. By anchoring the model to the higher public work tariff rather than the lower agricultural subsidy, the study suggests that the REC surplus is sufficient to commission professional-grade landscape maintenance, effectively filling the gap left by rural abandonment. 2.3.3. The Stewardship Capacity The Energy-Stewardship Loop is closed by calculating the Stewardship Capacity (A stew): A s t e w = R R E C − C O p C N b S _ u n i t (1) where R REC (REC Revenue) is the gross revenue from energy production, C Op (Operative Cost) represents the technical operation and maintenance costs of the energy plants, and C NbS_unit (Nature-Based Solutions unit Cost) is the total cost of landscape maintenance. This metric (A stew) identifies the specific portion of high-value or high-risk landscape (e.g., strategic firebreaks, peri-urban slopes, or bio-corridors) that can be adopted and managed through the solar energy surplus. 2.4. Data Acquisition and Solar Resource Assessment The solar resource assessment was conducted using the PVGIS-SARAH3 database (European Union, 2001–2026). For each identified municipality, irradiation data on the optimally inclined plane (H(i) opt) was extracted for a four-year period (2020–2023). Preprocessing involved calibrating the tilt angle for each specific coordinate; this localized approach ensures that the specific energy yield calculations reflect the unique geographic conditions of each node in the Sibillini cluster. Following PVGIS technical standards, the total system loss is calculated as follows: TS L = ( 100 · ( 1 − ( 1 − α L ) · ( 1 − I L ) · ( 1 − S L ) ) ) (2) TS L = total system loss αL = angle-of-incidence loss I L = temperature/irradiance loss S L = standard system loss For example, a compound of angle-of-incidence loss of 3.7%, a temperature/irradiance loss of 7.2%, and a standard system loss of 14%, results in a comprehensive total loss of 23.1%. This conservative approach ensures that the projected specific yield of 1390 kWh/kWp is realistic for the high-altitude conditions of the Central Apennines. The calculation of the final energy yield Y f was performed using a custom Python 3,10 script. This script processes the monthly irradiation data to derive annual performance metrics, while the subsequent economic modeling for the Stewardship-REC surplus was conducted in MS Excel. To support the reproducibility of our findings, the Python code, including the parameters for H(i) opt calculations, is archived and publicly accessible via the Zenodo repository [at https://zenodo.org/records/19356503] (accessed on 25 May 2026). Validation through on-site measurements was not feasible during this study, as the public building stock is currently within the active post-seismic reconstruction phase. Consequently, the study utilizes the SARAH3 radiation database as the primary high-fidelity reference, supported by a validation step against the Global Solar Atlas (see Discussion, Section 4.2). 4.1. Interpretation of Results The application of the model to the regional reconstruction data allowed for the geographic visualization of the post-seismic solar potential ( Figure 6). The resulting spatial distribution highlights specific municipalities that possess a critical mass of reconstructed public buildings. These nodes are strategically positioned to act as the foundational pillars for the local Renewable Energy Communities, transforming the burden of public reconstruction into an active network of distributed renewable power generation. The Stewardship-REC model proposes a scalable solution for Italy’s Inner Areas, which cover 59% of the national territory (177,000 km 2) and face severe land abandonment risks, with over 2 million hectares of national agricultural area currently lacking economic viability [ 57, 58]. A prudent extrapolation suggests that scaling the Sibillini cluster’s metrics to just 10% of these vulnerable regions would generate approximately 114 GWh of clean energy annually. Based on 2024 ISPRA emission factors [ 59], this network would avoid 24,500 tons of CO 2 per year while injecting a self-sustaining ecosystem fund of over EUR 13.6 million annually into rural economies. By structurally linking energy decentralization with landscape maintenance, this framework addresses systemic vulnerabilities, such as wildfire risk and land abandonment, by providing a financial mechanism for territorial management. 4.4. Sensitivity Analysis The economic robustness of the proposed framework was evaluated through a sensitivity analysis utilizing a 3x3 contingency matrix ( Table 5). This procedure assesses the stability of the annual Stewardship Capacity (A stew), quantified as the total fundable land area (ha) per annum, against a ±20% variation in two primary stochastic parameters: System Yield (performance ratio, PR): reflecting technical variances, environmental uncertainties, and localized shading effects (Baseline PR = 0.80). Incentive Rates: representing the inherent volatility of energy markets and potential shifts in the national regulatory framework (Baseline 0.12 EUR/kWh). Table 5. Sensitivity analysis of the total annual Stewardship Capacity (A stew) [ha/year] in response to ±20% fluctuations in System Yield (PR) and Incentive Rates. Table 5. Sensitivity analysis of the total annual Stewardship Capacity (A stew) [ha/year] in response to ±20% fluctuations in System Yield (PR) and Incentive Rates. A stew [ha/Year] Yield −20% (PR = 0.64) Baseline Yield (PR = 0.80) Yield +20% (PR = 0.96) Incentive −20%(0.096 EUR/kWh)468 ha 611 ha 754 ha Baseline Incentive (0.120 EUR /kWh)611 ha 790 ha 969 ha Incentive +20%(0.144 EUR /kWh)754 ha 969 ha 1184 ha The sensitivity matrix reveals that even in the most pessimistic scenario (bottom-left/top-left cells), the model maintains a positive, although significantly reduced, impact. Specifically, even with a simultaneous 20% drop in both technical performance and energy incentives, the Sibillini cluster can still fund over 460 hectares of active landscape maintenance annually. Conversely, under optimistic conditions, this capacity expands to nearly 1200 hectares, demonstrating the high scalability and economic stability of the Stewardship-REC framework as a primary tool for territorial resilience. 5. Conclusions This research provides a mixed-method framework that integrates spatial energy modeling with economic feasibility to address the compounded vulnerabilities of Italy’s mountain territories. The specific contribution of this study is its application to a vulnerable territorial context characterized by historical rural depopulation (Inner Areas) and post-seismic structural damage. By integrating decentralized energy generation into post-disaster reconstruction frameworks, this research provides a methodological link between energy transition modeling and community-level land management policies. In precise terms, the key takeaways of this research structurally answer the core research questions (RQs): Geographic Heterogeneity and Energy Hubs (RQ1): While the cluster achieves an exceptional average yield of 1390 kWh/kWp (outperforming the national average by 30%), spatial analysis reveals a hyper-localized energy landscape dictated by mountain geomorphology. Production ranges significantly from 1218 kWh/kWp in valley bottoms (e.g., Bolognola) to 1567 kWh/kWp in high-irradiation plateaus (e.g., Castelsantangelo sul Nera). This heterogeneity proves that regional planning cannot rely on generic provincial averages, requiring the strategic selection of micro-climatic Energy Hubs. The Economic Stewardship Mechanism (RQ2): The proposed REC framework is economically self-sustaining, capable of generating approximately EUR 1.08 million in annual revenue. This surplus shifts conservation from passive subsidies to an active stewardship model capable of funding the maintenance of 790 hectares annually. Specifically, interventions should be focused on the Wildland–Urban Interface, the critical transition zone where residential structures meet flammable forest fuels [ 64]. In the Apennine context, post-seismic abandonment has accelerated the biomass encroachment around villages, creating a continuous fuel load that facilitates high-intensity wildfire spread [ 28]. This approach transforms the REC from a mere energy producer into a strategic planner for civil protection, ensuring that the financial surplus is invested where the risk to human life and infrastructure is highest. Asset Recovery and Land Preservation (RQ3): Through the conservative application of the C e conversion proxy, the spatial model identifies 325 viable energy nodes within the public reconstruction portfolio. By prioritizing these distributed rooftops, the framework circumvents severe national constraints, protecting pristine mountain landscapes from soil consumption, and redefines post-disaster rebuilding not as a cost center, but as a productive infrastructural asset for long-term territorial resilience. Nevertheless, the proposed Stewardship-REC model presents three primary limitations. First, the spatial analysis relies on the administrative Open Data Sisma repository, which lacks precise architectural volumetric data. This necessitated the application of a 40% conversion proxy (C e) derived from specific municipal datasets. While this introduces spatial uncertainty, the resulting baseline remains reliable, as validated by its statistical alignment with Global Solar Atlas benchmarks. Second, the economic feasibility of the EUR 1200/ha landscape maintenance fund is strictly contingent upon national tariff stability. Because the Stewardship-REC is a pioneering framework and the physical energy nodes are currently pre-construction, the economic assumptions regarding R REC, C Op, and C Nbs_unit remain scenario-based rather than empirically validated. Rather than providing a definitive financial audit, it establishes the critical break-even thresholds necessary for administrative planning. Indeed, sensitivity analyses indicate the model is sustainable only if the national GSE incentive exceeds 0.08 EUR/kWh; a reduction below this threshold would decrease Stewardship Capacity by approximately 15%, requiring a proportional recalibration of environmental targets. Finally, practical deployment faces critical technical and institutional constraints. The study quantifies theoretical generation but omits localized grid hosting capacity, necessitating future grid-flow simulations to assess infrastructure bottlenecks. Furthermore, municipalities in Italy’s Inner Areas often lack the administrative personnel required to navigate the bureaucratic complexities of the CACER framework, suggesting that future execution will rely heavily on targeted capacity-building or the intervention of third-party energy aggregators. Therefore, future studies must address specific methodological limitations to fully operationalize this framework. First, to overcome the spatial uncertainties inherent in administrative post-disaster databases, future research must utilize updated cadastral systems and GIS-based architectural surveys to identify the exact net surface and geometry of available rooftops at the definitive conclusion of the reconstruction process. Currently, high-resolution 3D cadastral datasets detailing specific roof azimuths and slopes are unavailable for these rural mountain municipalities. Moreover, an ex-post empirical validation is physically precluded at the current stage of the post-seismic process: according to the latest institutional data [ 44], 35% of the public interventions are still in the ongoing design phase and 2.4% have not yet commenced. Consequently, future research will need to incorporate definitive ”as-built” architectural surveys and high-resolution cadastral mapping to refine the theoretical generation profiles once the physical reconstruction process is fully finalized. Second, technical simulations of local low- and medium-voltage grid hosting capacities are required to assess potential infrastructure bottlenecks. Finally, future studies should introduce a highly quantitative, longitudinal evaluation of the proposed socio-economic loop. Research must track the exact conversion rates of local energy availability into stewardship income, and subsequently measure how this income generates local occupational opportunities to successfully contrast rural depopulation. Conducting comparative analyses of these targeted policy results across other European marginalized or disaster-affected regions will be essential to validate the international scalability of the Stewardship-REC paradigm.

www.mdpi.com

Zum Originalartikel