Open Research for Planning Electricity Decarbonization: Application to Methane Leakage

First I will describe my efforts to accelerate the pace and quality of electricity decarbonization research by improving an open-source grid planning model (SWITCH) and making it usable to other researchers. The lack of shared datasets and modeling tools has hindered energy planning, forcing researchers to compile datasets and write models from scratch. I will describe my efforts to make the SWITCH grid-planning model more accessible to interdisciplinary researchers who have limited backgrounds in computational modeling, programming, or data management.
In the second section of my talk, I will present an application of the SWITCH model to assess the impacts of methane leakage on a carbon-constrained power grid. Natural gas (NG) is often described as a bridge fuel for decarbonizing the electricity sector because its low carbon intensity relative to coal, low costs due to hydraulic fracturing, and the fast-ramping capabilities of gas-fired generation. Several publications on methane emissions have ranked individual generation technologies by overall greenhouse gas emissions, but none have yet used a systems approach to assess how methane emissions impact a larger generation portfolio with a detailed representation of renewables. My results indicate that emission rates significantly impact the use of NG as a direct substitute for coal, but have a much smaller impact on the deployment and use of combustion turbines for reserves and peaking capacity. Increased methane emissions can increase or decrease the use of NG to complement renewables, depending on the emissions cap context.
Speaker: Josiah Johnston, UC Berkeley
Wednesday, 11/05/14
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