Would firm generators facilitate or deter variable renewable energy in a carbon-free electricity system?

被引:18
|
作者
Yuan, Mengyao [1 ]
Tong, Fan [1 ,2 ]
Duan, Lei [1 ]
Dowling, Jacqueline A. [3 ]
Davis, Steven J. [4 ]
Lewis, Nathan S. [3 ]
Caldeira, Ken [1 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Carnegie Inst Sci, Dept Global Ecol, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
[2] Lawrence Berkeley Natl Lab, Energy Anal & Environm Impacts Div, Berkeley, CA USA
[3] CALTECH, Div Chem & Chem Engn, Pasadena, CA 91125 USA
[4] Univ Calif Irvine, Dept Earth Syst Sci, Irvine, CA USA
[5] Gates Ventures LLC, Kirkland, WA USA
关键词
Net-zero electricity systems; Firm carbon-free electricity generation; Variable renewable energy; NUCLEAR-POWER; WIND; FLEXIBILITY; STORAGE; FUTURE; SOLAR;
D O I
10.1016/j.apenergy.2020.115789
中图分类号
TE [石油、天然气工业]; TK [能源与动力工程];
学科分类号
0807 ; 0820 ;
摘要
To reduce atmospheric carbon dioxide emissions and mitigate impacts of climate change, countries across the world have mandated quotas for renewable electricity. But a question has remained largely unexplored: would low-cost, firm, zero-carbon electricity generation technologies enhance-or would they displace-deployment of variable renewable electricity generation technologies, i.e., wind and solar photovoltaics, in a least-cost, fully reliable, and deeply decarbonized electricity system? To address this question, we modeled idealized electricity systems based on historical weather data and considered only technoeconomic factors. We did not apply a predetermined use model. We found that cost reductions in firm generation technologies (starting at current costs, ramping down to nearly zero) uniformly resulted in increased penetration of the firm technologies and decreased penetration of variable renewable electricity generation, in electricity systems where technology deployment is primarily driven by relative costs, and across a wide array of future technology cost assumptions. Similarly, reduced costs of variable renewable electricity (starting at current costs, ramping down to nearly zero) drove out firm generation technologies. Yet relative to deployment of "must-run" firm generation technologies, and when the studied firm technologies have high fixed costs relative to variable costs, the addition of flexibility to firm generation technologies had only limited impacts on the system cost, less than a 9% system cost reduction in our idealized model. These results reveal that policies and funding that support particular technologies for lowor zero-carbon electricity generation can inhibit the development of other lowor zero-carbon alternatives.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 43 条
  • [31] Renewable energy consumption - financial globalization-tourism nexus with nonlinearity and cross-sectional dependence during Asia's carbon-free transition
    Fang, Lin
    Hu, Bin
    Sher, Falak
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH, 2024, 31 (12) : 18435 - 18447
  • [32] Renewable energy consumption — financial globalization-tourism nexus with nonlinearity and cross-sectional dependence during Asia’s carbon-free transition
    Lin Fang
    Bin Hu
    Falak Sher
    Environmental Science and Pollution Research, 2024, 31 : 18435 - 18447
  • [33] Multi-Objective Environmental Economic Dispatch of an Electricity System Considering Integrated Natural Gas Units and Variable Renewable Energy Sources
    Omar, Ahmed, I
    Ali, Ziad M.
    Al-Gabalawy, Mostafa
    Aleem, Shady H. E. Abdel
    Al-Dhaifallah, Mujahed
    MATHEMATICS, 2020, 8 (07)
  • [34] How do variable renewable energy technologies affect firm-level day-ahead output decisions: Evidence from the Turkish wholesale electricity market
    Sirin, Selahattin Murat
    Uz, Dilek
    Sevindik, Irem
    ENERGY ECONOMICS, 2022, 112
  • [35] Exergy, exergoeconomic optimization and exergoenvironmental analysis of a hybrid solar, wind, and marine energy power system: A strategy for carbon-free electrical production
    Zainul, Rahadian
    Basem, Ali
    Alfaker, Mohamad J.
    Sharma, Pawan
    Kumar, Abhishek
    Al-Bahrani, Mohammed
    Elawady, A.
    Abbas, Mohamed
    Fooladi, Hadi
    Pandey, Shatrudhan
    HELIYON, 2024, 10 (16)
  • [36] How Would Structural Change in Electricity and Hydrogen End Use Impact Low-Carbon Transition of an Energy System? A Case Study of China
    Zhang, Nuobei
    Li, Zheng
    Zheng, Xiaoying
    Liu, Pei
    PROCESSES, 2024, 12 (03)
  • [37] A two-stage bi-level electricity-carbon coordinated optimization model for China's coal-fired power system considering variable renewable energy bidding
    Feng, Sida
    Zhang, Xingping
    Zhang, Haonan
    Ju, Liwei
    Zhang, Xinyue
    ENERGY, 2024, 312
  • [38] Techno-economic analysis of zero/negative carbon electricity-hydrogen-water hybrid system with renewable energy in remote island
    Wei, Guomeng
    Qu, Zhiguo
    Zhang, Jianfei
    Chen, Weiwen
    APPLIED ENERGY, 2025, 381
  • [39] A calcium looping system powered by renewable electricity for long-term thermochemical energy storage, residential heat supply and carbon capture
    Xu, Qianghui
    Wang, Lwei
    Li, Zhenshan
    Shi, Lin
    ENERGY CONVERSION AND MANAGEMENT, 2023, 276
  • [40] Carbon dioxide direct air capture for effective climate change mitigation based on renewable electricity: a new type of energy system sector coupling
    Breyer, Christian
    Fasihi, Mahdi
    Aghahosseini, Arman
    MITIGATION AND ADAPTATION STRATEGIES FOR GLOBAL CHANGE, 2020, 25 (01) : 43 - 65