
Nobody prepares you for the first year.
You study the theory. You pass the certifications. You understand the physics of photovoltaic conversion, the basics of inverter technology, the principles of yield simulation. You feel ready.
And then you arrive on site for the first time — at a real industrial facility, with real equipment, real pressures, and real consequences when something goes wrong — and you realize very quickly that everything you studied was necessary but not sufficient.
It took me between three and six months before I genuinely felt comfortable in my role as a solar PV supervisor at a cement plant in Morocco. Not three to six months of confusion — but three to six months of daily recalibration between what I thought I knew and what the site was actually teaching me.
I am writing this article for the engineer who is about to start their first O&M role on an industrial solar project. For the supervisor who just commissioned their first system and is not sure what to prioritize. For the plant manager who hired someone to manage their solar investment and wants to understand what that person’s real job looks like.
These are the things I wish someone had told me before year one.
Disclosure: This article contains affiliate links. If you purchase through these links, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. I only recommend technical resources that I consider genuinely useful for industrial solar professionals working in Africa and the MENA region.
Lesson 1 — The monitoring data will confuse you at first — and that is completely normal
I want to start with the lesson that surprised me most — because I have never seen it written honestly anywhere.
My biggest technical shock in my first year was not a dramatic equipment failure. It was not a grid fault or a commissioning error. It was something far more ordinary and far more unsettling :
I could not understand my own monitoring data.
Not because the data was wrong. Not because the monitoring system was poorly designed. But because interpreting industrial solar monitoring data correctly requires a kind of contextual knowledge that no certification program fully prepares you for.
I would open the dashboard and see production numbers that looked slightly lower than expected. Was it a real problem? Was it normal seasonal variation? Was it soiling? Was it a string fault beginning to develop? Was it irradiance variation I had not accounted for? I did not know — and nobody around me had the specific experience to tell me quickly.
The data was there. The meaning was not.
It took several months of daily observation — correlating production figures against irradiance data, tracking Performance Ratio trends, doing physical inspections after every anomaly I could not explain remotely — before the monitoring data started to make sense as a coherent picture rather than a series of disconnected numbers.
What I know now that I did not know then : monitoring data only becomes readable when you have a baseline to compare against. Without a clear Performance Ratio reference — the 77 to 84% range I now track consistently on our system — every daily figure is ambiguous. With that baseline, deviations become immediately visible and actionable.
If you are starting your first industrial solar role — establish your PR baseline in the first 30 days. Everything else depends on it.
Lesson 2 — The maintenance team knows things no sensor ever will
This is the lesson that changed how I work more than any technical insight.
When I arrived in my role, I assumed my most valuable tools were my monitoring platform and my engineering knowledge. I was wrong.
My most valuable resource — the one that has prevented more problems, caught more faults early, and given me more operational insight than anything else — has been my relationship with the maintenance team on the ground.
The cleaning crew leader who notices that a specific section of the array looks different after a dust storm. The electrical technician who feels that a junction box connector does not seat correctly during a routine inspection. The maintenance coordinator who mentions casually that an inverter room has been running unusually hot this week.
None of these observations appear in any SCADA report. All of them have led to real findings — soiling patterns that affected yield, connection issues that were developing into string faults, thermal conditions that were causing inverter derating we had not yet detected in the production data.
In my first months I underestimated this completely. I was focused on data analysis and technical investigation. I treated the maintenance team as labor to be managed rather than as a genuine source of operational intelligence.
The shift happened gradually — as I started spending more time on site, explaining to the team what I was looking for and why it mattered, making it easy for them to report what they observed. The quality of information I received changed immediately.
Build those relationships in your first week. Not your first month. Your first week. Explain what you are trying to protect and why their observations matter. The best early warning system for your solar plant is not your SCADA — it is a well-informed and engaged maintenance team that trusts you enough to tell you what they see.
Lesson 3 — Soiling will surprise you every single time
I knew soiling was a factor before I started. I had read the textbooks. I understood that dust reduces panel output.
What I did not understand — until I lived it — was the scale and the relentlessness of industrial soiling at a cement plant.
We clean every single panel at our facility once per week. That is three cleanings per panel per month. And soiling still returns visibly within days of each cleaning cycle in high-production periods near the clinker handling areas.
The first time I saw this, I thought something was wrong — that maybe the panels were defective, or that the cleaning was not being done properly. It took several weeks of measurement and observation to understand that this was simply the reality of our environment.
Nobody — not the EPC contractor, not the feasibility study, not the O&M manual — had told me honestly what the cleaning frequency at an industrial site in North Africa actually needs to be. The yield model applied 1.5% annual soiling loss. Our real environment requires three cleanings per month just to keep losses within an acceptable range.
If you are starting your first industrial solar role — establish your real soiling rate in the first three months. Measure it. Document it. Build your cleaning schedule around actual data from your site, not the generic assumption in the yield model. That number was never designed for your environment.
Lesson 4 — Learn to read irradiance, not just production
This took me longer to understand than I would like to admit.
In my early months, I evaluated system performance primarily by looking at daily production figures — kilowatt-hours generated, compared to the previous day or the same day last month. When production was lower than expected, I would note it and move on unless the difference was dramatic.
What I was not doing was normalizing production against irradiance. And that made it almost impossible to distinguish between a performance problem and simply a cloudy day.
The difference is critical. If your system produces 10% less than yesterday — that tells you almost nothing without knowing whether yesterday had 10% more irradiance. If your Performance Ratio drops from 81% to 74% — that is a problem regardless of the weather, because PR is already irradiance-normalized.
Learning to calculate and track Performance Ratio correctly — against a clear-sky model for your specific location, not just against yesterday’s number — was one of the most important technical shifts in how I supervise our system.
At our cement plant in Morocco, we track PR within the 77 to 84% range consistently across normal operating conditions. Any deviation below 77% under clear sky conditions triggers a physical inspection the same day. Not because every deviation means something is seriously wrong — but because the cost of missing a real problem is far higher than the cost of an unnecessary inspection.
If you are new to solar supervision — make Performance Ratio tracking your first priority. Not daily kWh. Not monthly totals. PR against irradiance, every day, with clear alert thresholds defined before you need them.
The book that helped me most in building a rigorous approach to performance analysis during my first year was Photovoltaic Systems Engineering by Roger Messenger. If you are starting your first industrial solar role, I recommend reading chapters 7 and 8 before your first full operating season. It will change how you look at your monitoring data.
Lesson 5 — The commissioning baseline is your most valuable document
When you take over supervision of an industrial solar system — whether newly commissioned or already in operation — the first thing you need to establish is a clear performance baseline. What does this system look like when it is working correctly?
Without that baseline, you cannot detect degradation. You cannot identify underperformance. You cannot hold your EPC contractor accountable for warranty claims.
At commissioning, the critical measurements are Performance Ratio under clear sky conditions, infrared thermography of all modules, and IV curve tracing on a representative sample of strings. On well-commissioned industrial systems in Morocco, the PR baseline falls between 77 and 84%.
I learned this not from a manual but from the frustration of trying to evaluate a warranty claim on a string that had been underperforming by more than 15% for an unknown period — with no commissioning data to establish when the problem started or what the pre-fault performance level was.
The commissioning data is your most valuable document. Protect it, maintain it, and update it every operating season.
Lesson 6 — Ask for help earlier than feels comfortable
In my first year, I tried to figure out everything myself. When I encountered a problem I did not fully understand — an unusual inverter behavior, a monitoring anomaly that did not fit any pattern I recognized, a string fault that resisted every diagnosis I attempted — my instinct was to investigate alone before asking anyone else.
Sometimes this worked. More often it cost days or weeks of independent investigation that a conversation with a more experienced engineer would have resolved in an hour.
The lesson is simple but took me longer than it should to learn — asking for help is not a sign that you are not qualified for your role. It is how qualified engineers operate in complex technical environments.
Lesson 7 — Document everything, even when it feels unnecessary
Real operational knowledge lives in the details that automated systems do not capture. The inverter that was reset manually on a Tuesday afternoon in March. The cleaning cycle that was delayed by three days because of a transport issue. The string connection that was tightened during a routine inspection in October.
None of these are captured by your monitoring system. All of them matter when you are trying to understand why your system behaves the way it does today.
Start a field log on your first day. Write in it every time you observe something, do something, or decide something about your system. It will feel like unnecessary effort for the first six months. In year two and beyond — it will be one of the most valuable technical resources you have.
The first year of industrial solar supervision is a humbling experience — and a formative one.
It took me three to six months to feel genuinely comfortable in this role. Not because I lacked preparation — but because the gap between theory and real industrial supervision cannot be closed by studying alone. It closes through daily observation, honest measurement, and the kind of operational knowledge that only comes from walking the same array week after week and learning what it is trying to tell you.
My biggest technical shock was the monitoring data — not because it was wrong, but because reading it correctly requires a contextual understanding that no classroom provides. My most valuable resource was the maintenance team — not the SCADA, not the technical manuals, but the people who work closest to the equipment every day.
You arrive with knowledge. You leave with understanding. And the gap between those two things is filled with everything this article describes.
If you are at the beginning of your industrial solar career — in Morocco, across Africa, or anywhere in the MENA region — I hope these lessons save you some of the time it took me to learn them.
If you want to discuss a specific challenge on your industrial solar project — the contact form is open. I respond to every message personally.
More articles coming soon — AI applications for industrial solar O&M, and a complete field guide to performance ratio monitoring for heavy industry in MENA.
Publié par :
Solar PV MENA Expert
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Disclosure: This article contains affiliate links. If you purchase through these links, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. I only recommend technical resources that I consider genuinely useful for industrial solar professionals working in Africa and the MENA region.