Electric Power Infrastructure Vulnerabilities to Heat Waves from Climate Change

abstract: Electricity infrastructure vulnerabilities were assessed for future heat waves due to climate change. Critical processes and component relationships were identified and characterized with consideration for the terminal event of service outages, including cascading failures in transmission-...

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Other Authors: Burillo, Daniel (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.50558
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-505582018-10-02T03:01:11Z Electric Power Infrastructure Vulnerabilities to Heat Waves from Climate Change abstract: Electricity infrastructure vulnerabilities were assessed for future heat waves due to climate change. Critical processes and component relationships were identified and characterized with consideration for the terminal event of service outages, including cascading failures in transmission-level components that can result in blackouts. The most critical dependency identified was the increase in peak electricity demand with higher air temperatures. Historical and future air temperatures were characterized within and across Los Angeles County, California (LAC) and Maricopa County (Phoenix), Arizona. LAC was identified as more vulnerable to heat waves than Phoenix due to a wider distribution of historical temperatures. Two approaches were developed to estimate peak demand based on air temperatures, a top-down statistical model and bottom-up spatial building energy model. Both approaches yielded similar results, in that peak demand should increase sub-linearly at temperatures above 40°C (104 °F) due to saturation in the coincidence of air conditioning (AC) duty cycles. Spatial projections for peak demand were developed for LAC to 2060 considering potential changes in population, building type, building efficiency, AC penetration, appliance efficiency, and air temperatures due climate change. These projections were spatially allocated to delivery system components (generation, transmission lines, and substations) to consider their vulnerability in terms of thermal de-rated capacity and weather adjusted load factor (load divided by capacity). Peak hour electricity demand was projected to increase in residential and commercial sectors by 0.2–6.5 GW (2–51%) by 2060. All grid components, except those near Santa Monica Beach, were projected to experience 2–20% capacity loss due to air temperatures exceeding 40 °C (104 °F). Based on scenario projections, and substation load factors for Southern California Edison (SCE), SCE will require 848—6,724 MW (4-32%) of additional substation capacity or peak shaving in its LAC service territories by 2060 to meet additional demand associated with population growth projections. Dissertation/Thesis Burillo, Daniel (Author) Chester, Mikhail V (Advisor) Ruddell, Benjamin (Committee member) Johnson, Nathan (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Civil engineering Statistics Sustainability capacity shortages climate change electricity infrastructure extreme heat peak demand vulnerabilities assessment eng 261 pages Doctoral Dissertation Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering 2018 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.50558 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2018
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Civil engineering
Statistics
Sustainability
capacity shortages
climate change
electricity infrastructure
extreme heat
peak demand
vulnerabilities assessment
spellingShingle Civil engineering
Statistics
Sustainability
capacity shortages
climate change
electricity infrastructure
extreme heat
peak demand
vulnerabilities assessment
Electric Power Infrastructure Vulnerabilities to Heat Waves from Climate Change
description abstract: Electricity infrastructure vulnerabilities were assessed for future heat waves due to climate change. Critical processes and component relationships were identified and characterized with consideration for the terminal event of service outages, including cascading failures in transmission-level components that can result in blackouts. The most critical dependency identified was the increase in peak electricity demand with higher air temperatures. Historical and future air temperatures were characterized within and across Los Angeles County, California (LAC) and Maricopa County (Phoenix), Arizona. LAC was identified as more vulnerable to heat waves than Phoenix due to a wider distribution of historical temperatures. Two approaches were developed to estimate peak demand based on air temperatures, a top-down statistical model and bottom-up spatial building energy model. Both approaches yielded similar results, in that peak demand should increase sub-linearly at temperatures above 40°C (104 °F) due to saturation in the coincidence of air conditioning (AC) duty cycles. Spatial projections for peak demand were developed for LAC to 2060 considering potential changes in population, building type, building efficiency, AC penetration, appliance efficiency, and air temperatures due climate change. These projections were spatially allocated to delivery system components (generation, transmission lines, and substations) to consider their vulnerability in terms of thermal de-rated capacity and weather adjusted load factor (load divided by capacity). Peak hour electricity demand was projected to increase in residential and commercial sectors by 0.2–6.5 GW (2–51%) by 2060. All grid components, except those near Santa Monica Beach, were projected to experience 2–20% capacity loss due to air temperatures exceeding 40 °C (104 °F). Based on scenario projections, and substation load factors for Southern California Edison (SCE), SCE will require 848—6,724 MW (4-32%) of additional substation capacity or peak shaving in its LAC service territories by 2060 to meet additional demand associated with population growth projections. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Civil, Environmental and Sustainable Engineering 2018
author2 Burillo, Daniel (Author)
author_facet Burillo, Daniel (Author)
title Electric Power Infrastructure Vulnerabilities to Heat Waves from Climate Change
title_short Electric Power Infrastructure Vulnerabilities to Heat Waves from Climate Change
title_full Electric Power Infrastructure Vulnerabilities to Heat Waves from Climate Change
title_fullStr Electric Power Infrastructure Vulnerabilities to Heat Waves from Climate Change
title_full_unstemmed Electric Power Infrastructure Vulnerabilities to Heat Waves from Climate Change
title_sort electric power infrastructure vulnerabilities to heat waves from climate change
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.50558
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