Nahaufnahme eines durch Hagel beschädigten Solarmoduls mit gerissenen Photovoltaikzellen bei bedecktem Himmel
Єгор Городок / stock.adobe.com
2026-03-13 press release

VDE Americas Improves Accuracy of Hail Risk Model to Enhance Solar Farm Risk Assessments

With the start of the hail season in the US, new insights into wind speed are increasing the accuracy of hail risk data for solar projects.

(SAN JOSE, Calif., March 13, 2026) VDE Americas, a global leader in technical advisory and catastrophic risk assessment for the solar industry, announced that it has enhanced its proprietary Hail Risk Model with newly analyzed wind speed data, significantly improving the accuracy of hail damage predictions for solar power generation facilities.

Recent meteorological data analysis by VDE reveals that winds during hailstorms can be stronger than previously understood, with wind speeds at some locations more than doubling earlier estimates. VDE reached this conclusion after carefully filtering weather records to focus on events where hailstorms passed directly over weather stations across the contiguous United States. Stronger winds cause hailstones to strike panels more directly and with greater force, increasing the likelihood of solar panel breakage. By incorporating these more accurate wind speeds into its Hail Risk Model, VDE’s risk assessments better reflect real-world storm conditions.

"Wind speed and direction modify both the fall angle and impact energy of hail," explained Central Michigan University's Dr. John Allen, a leading expert on hail meteorology and loss modeling, and a consultant to VDE. "To effectively predict damage in the field, hail loss models need to account for the influence of wind. VDE's improved loss model better informs this extremely important piece of the puzzle by more accurately characterizing representative wind speed and direction during hail events."

VDE’s analysis of 2025 weather radar data indicates that very severe convective storms characterized by greater than 45-mm hail—a typical threshold for solar panel damage—occurred at or near dozens of utility-scale solar facilities. Despite the relatively high frequency of events, reported catastrophic losses were lower in 2025 than in previous years, potentially due in part to project operators’ increased adoption of hail stow protocols and severe weather alert services. Still, hail remains the number one catastrophic peril facing the solar industry.

“Our loss database of physical damage events to renewables assets reveals that hail accounts for 73% of total solar losses despite representing only 6% of loss events,” said Nicole Thompson, Senior Data Science Manager for Property Insurance at kWh Analytics, a specialty climate insurance provider. “Moreover, we found that, by count, 19% of these hail-related losses occurred in North Carolina, which is not traditionally considered a highrisk area for hail.”

To ensure clients always have access to the latest advancements in VDE Hail Risk Intelligence, the company is launching an annual subscription service that automatically delivers annually updated hail loss reports to support insurance renewal. The subscription service and other related products—including hail risk maps, engineered financial loss reports, and hail stow protocols—are available from VDE America's new sales portal.

"Solar is the largest source of new electricity capacity globally, but without adequate planning, the combination of wind and hail represents a significant threat to the operation of these facilities," said Brian Grenko, CEO and President of VDE Americas. "Our Hail Risk Intelligence products and services provide project stakeholders with the most accurate data available to optimize asset resiliency and mitigate potential financial losses.”

Meteorological data visualization

This meteorological data visualization shows potentially damaging hail events near operational utility-scale solar facilities commissioned prior to 2025, versus events near facilities that were fully commissioned or under construction in 2025.

| VDE Americas

About VDE Americas

VDE Americas provides technical advisory and risk mitigation services to renewable energy stakeholders – from project owners and financiers to equipment manufacturers and those who construct, operate and insure large-scale power generation and energy storage facilities. A wholly owned subsidiary of the VDE Group, VDE Americas is recognized globally as the leading authority in solar project hail risk intelligence and loss prevention. The company's expertise and innovative solutions have facilitated billions of dollars of investment in renewable energy assets.

For more information, visit: www.vde.com/en/vde-americas

About VDE

VDE, one of the largest technology organizations in Europe, has been regarded as a synonym for innovation and technological progress for more than 130 years. VDE is the only organization in the world that combines science, standardization, testing, certification, and application consulting under one umbrella. The VDE mark has been synonymous with the highest safety standards and consumer protection for more than 100 years. 

Our passion is the advancement of technology, the next generation of engineers and technologists, and lifelong learning and career development “on the job”. Within the VDE network more than 2,000 employees at over 60 locations worldwide, more than 100,000 honorary experts, and around 1,500 companies are dedicated to ensuring a future worth living: networked, digital, electrical.  
Shaping the e-dialistic future. 

The VDE (VDE Association for Electrical, Electronic & Information Technologies) is headquartered in Frankfurt am Main. For more information, visit www.vde.com

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