MENA compared to Europe: The influence of land use, nuclear power, and transmission expansion on renewable electricity system costs

Most studies that examine CO2-neutral, or near CO2-neutral, power systems by using energy system models investigate Europe or the United States, while similar studies for other regions are rare. In this paper, we focus on the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), where weather conditions, especially...

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Main Authors: H. Ek Fälth, D. Atsmon, L. Reichenberg, V. Verendel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-01-01
Series:Energy Strategy Reviews
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211467X20301437
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spelling doaj-024683f1048148f98dfbf0aa0871ea642021-01-18T04:10:22ZengElsevierEnergy Strategy Reviews2211-467X2021-01-0133100590MENA compared to Europe: The influence of land use, nuclear power, and transmission expansion on renewable electricity system costsH. Ek Fälth0D. Atsmon1L. Reichenberg2V. Verendel3Department of Space Earth and Environment, Chalmers University of Technology, 412 96, Göteborg, Sweden; Corresponding author.Department of Space Earth and Environment, Chalmers University of Technology, 412 96, Göteborg, SwedenDepartment of Space Earth and Environment, Chalmers University of Technology, 412 96, Göteborg, Sweden; Department of Mathematics and Systems Analysis, Aalto University, Otakaari 1 F, Espoo, FinlandDepartment of Computer Science and Engineering, Chalmers University of Technology, 412 96, Göteborg, SwedenMost studies that examine CO2-neutral, or near CO2-neutral, power systems by using energy system models investigate Europe or the United States, while similar studies for other regions are rare. In this paper, we focus on the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), where weather conditions, especially for solar, differ substantially from those in Europe. We use a green-field linear capacity expansion model with over-night investment to assess the effect on the system cost of (i) limiting/expanding the amount of land available for wind and solar farms, (ii) allowing for nuclear power and (iii) disallowing for international transmission. The assessment is done under three different cost regimes for solar PV and battery storage.First, we find that the amount of available land for wind and solar farms can have a significant impact on the system cost, with a cost increase of 0–50% as a result of reduced available land. In MENA, the impact on system cost from land availability is contingent on the PV and battery cost regime, while in Europe it is not. Second, allowing for nuclear power has a minor effect in MENA, while it may decrease the system cost in Europe by up to 20%. In Europe, the effect on system cost from allowing for nuclear power is highly dependent on the PV and battery cost regime. Third, disallowing for international transmission increases the system cost by up to 25% in both Europe and MENA, and the cost increase depends on the cost regime for PV and batteries.The impacts on system cost from these three controversial and policy-relevant factors in a decarbonized power system thus play out differently, depending on (i) the region and (ii) uncertain future investment costs for solar PV and storage. We conclude that a renewable power system in MENA is likely to be less costly than one in Europe, irrespective of future uncertainties regarding investment cost for PV and batteries, and policies surrounding nuclear power, transmission, and land available for wind- and solar farms. In MENA, the system cost varies between 42 and 96 $/MWh. In Europe, the system cost varies between 51 and 102 $/MWh.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211467X20301437Weather conditionsPublic concernNuclear powerTransmissionVariable renewable energyElectricity system modeling
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author H. Ek Fälth
D. Atsmon
L. Reichenberg
V. Verendel
spellingShingle H. Ek Fälth
D. Atsmon
L. Reichenberg
V. Verendel
MENA compared to Europe: The influence of land use, nuclear power, and transmission expansion on renewable electricity system costs
Energy Strategy Reviews
Weather conditions
Public concern
Nuclear power
Transmission
Variable renewable energy
Electricity system modeling
author_facet H. Ek Fälth
D. Atsmon
L. Reichenberg
V. Verendel
author_sort H. Ek Fälth
title MENA compared to Europe: The influence of land use, nuclear power, and transmission expansion on renewable electricity system costs
title_short MENA compared to Europe: The influence of land use, nuclear power, and transmission expansion on renewable electricity system costs
title_full MENA compared to Europe: The influence of land use, nuclear power, and transmission expansion on renewable electricity system costs
title_fullStr MENA compared to Europe: The influence of land use, nuclear power, and transmission expansion on renewable electricity system costs
title_full_unstemmed MENA compared to Europe: The influence of land use, nuclear power, and transmission expansion on renewable electricity system costs
title_sort mena compared to europe: the influence of land use, nuclear power, and transmission expansion on renewable electricity system costs
publisher Elsevier
series Energy Strategy Reviews
issn 2211-467X
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Most studies that examine CO2-neutral, or near CO2-neutral, power systems by using energy system models investigate Europe or the United States, while similar studies for other regions are rare. In this paper, we focus on the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), where weather conditions, especially for solar, differ substantially from those in Europe. We use a green-field linear capacity expansion model with over-night investment to assess the effect on the system cost of (i) limiting/expanding the amount of land available for wind and solar farms, (ii) allowing for nuclear power and (iii) disallowing for international transmission. The assessment is done under three different cost regimes for solar PV and battery storage.First, we find that the amount of available land for wind and solar farms can have a significant impact on the system cost, with a cost increase of 0–50% as a result of reduced available land. In MENA, the impact on system cost from land availability is contingent on the PV and battery cost regime, while in Europe it is not. Second, allowing for nuclear power has a minor effect in MENA, while it may decrease the system cost in Europe by up to 20%. In Europe, the effect on system cost from allowing for nuclear power is highly dependent on the PV and battery cost regime. Third, disallowing for international transmission increases the system cost by up to 25% in both Europe and MENA, and the cost increase depends on the cost regime for PV and batteries.The impacts on system cost from these three controversial and policy-relevant factors in a decarbonized power system thus play out differently, depending on (i) the region and (ii) uncertain future investment costs for solar PV and storage. We conclude that a renewable power system in MENA is likely to be less costly than one in Europe, irrespective of future uncertainties regarding investment cost for PV and batteries, and policies surrounding nuclear power, transmission, and land available for wind- and solar farms. In MENA, the system cost varies between 42 and 96 $/MWh. In Europe, the system cost varies between 51 and 102 $/MWh.
topic Weather conditions
Public concern
Nuclear power
Transmission
Variable renewable energy
Electricity system modeling
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211467X20301437
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