Weathering adaptation: Grid infrastructure planning in a changing climate

Decisions related to electric power systems planning and operations rely on assumptions and insights informed by historic weather data and records of past performance. Evolving climate trends are, however, changing the energy use patterns and operating conditions of grid assets, thus altering the na...

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Main Authors: Anna M. Brockway, Laurel N. Dunn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-01-01
Series:Climate Risk Management
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2212096320300462
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spelling doaj-1a00f958f18c46b9a612703d648a228c2020-12-13T04:18:57ZengElsevierClimate Risk Management2212-09632020-01-0130100256Weathering adaptation: Grid infrastructure planning in a changing climateAnna M. Brockway0Laurel N. Dunn1Energy and Resources Group, University of California, Berkeley, United States; Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences, University of California, Berkeley, United States; Corresponding authors.Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, United States; Corresponding authors.Decisions related to electric power systems planning and operations rely on assumptions and insights informed by historic weather data and records of past performance. Evolving climate trends are, however, changing the energy use patterns and operating conditions of grid assets, thus altering the nature and severity of risks the system faces. Because grid assets remain in operation for decades, planning for evolving risks will require incorporating climate projections into grid infrastructure planning processes. The current work traces a pathway for climate-aware decision-making in the electricity sector. We evaluate the suitability of using existing climate models and data for electricity planning and discuss their limitations. We review the interactions between grid infrastructure and climate by synthesizing what is known about how changing environmental operating conditions would impact infrastructure utilization, constraints, and performance. We contextualize our findings by presenting a case study of California, examining if and where climate data can be integrated into infrastructure planning processes. The core contribution of the work is a series of nine recommendations detailing advancements in climate projections, grid modeling architecture, and disaster preparedness that would be needed to ensure that infrastructure planning decisions are robust to uncertainty and risks associated with evolving climate conditions.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2212096320300462Grid infrastructureClimate changeUncertainty analysisInfrastructure planningRisk mitigation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anna M. Brockway
Laurel N. Dunn
spellingShingle Anna M. Brockway
Laurel N. Dunn
Weathering adaptation: Grid infrastructure planning in a changing climate
Climate Risk Management
Grid infrastructure
Climate change
Uncertainty analysis
Infrastructure planning
Risk mitigation
author_facet Anna M. Brockway
Laurel N. Dunn
author_sort Anna M. Brockway
title Weathering adaptation: Grid infrastructure planning in a changing climate
title_short Weathering adaptation: Grid infrastructure planning in a changing climate
title_full Weathering adaptation: Grid infrastructure planning in a changing climate
title_fullStr Weathering adaptation: Grid infrastructure planning in a changing climate
title_full_unstemmed Weathering adaptation: Grid infrastructure planning in a changing climate
title_sort weathering adaptation: grid infrastructure planning in a changing climate
publisher Elsevier
series Climate Risk Management
issn 2212-0963
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Decisions related to electric power systems planning and operations rely on assumptions and insights informed by historic weather data and records of past performance. Evolving climate trends are, however, changing the energy use patterns and operating conditions of grid assets, thus altering the nature and severity of risks the system faces. Because grid assets remain in operation for decades, planning for evolving risks will require incorporating climate projections into grid infrastructure planning processes. The current work traces a pathway for climate-aware decision-making in the electricity sector. We evaluate the suitability of using existing climate models and data for electricity planning and discuss their limitations. We review the interactions between grid infrastructure and climate by synthesizing what is known about how changing environmental operating conditions would impact infrastructure utilization, constraints, and performance. We contextualize our findings by presenting a case study of California, examining if and where climate data can be integrated into infrastructure planning processes. The core contribution of the work is a series of nine recommendations detailing advancements in climate projections, grid modeling architecture, and disaster preparedness that would be needed to ensure that infrastructure planning decisions are robust to uncertainty and risks associated with evolving climate conditions.
topic Grid infrastructure
Climate change
Uncertainty analysis
Infrastructure planning
Risk mitigation
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2212096320300462
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