Decarbonization pathways for the western Canadian electricity system

Decarbonizing the electricity system (i.e. eliminating generation from fossil fuels and replacing it with non-emitting sources) is widely considered a necessary step to limiting anthropogenic emissions and minimizing the impacts of climate change. Selecting which non-emitting generators should repla...

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Main Author: English, Jeffrey
Other Authors: Rowe, Andrew Michael
Format: Others
Language:English
en
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/11483
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spelling ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-114832020-01-15T16:01:06Z Decarbonization pathways for the western Canadian electricity system English, Jeffrey Rowe, Andrew Michael Wild, Peter Martin Energy systems Optimization Renewable energy Technoeconomic modelling Decarbonizing the electricity system (i.e. eliminating generation from fossil fuels and replacing it with non-emitting sources) is widely considered a necessary step to limiting anthropogenic emissions and minimizing the impacts of climate change. Selecting which non-emitting generators should replace existing fossil fuel sources, and when to build them, is critical to the success of this transition. The optimal pathway to decarbonisation is highly region-specific. It is impacted by both factors such as availability of renewable resources, existing generation resources, and government policy. This dissertation presents a techno-economic model that is used to assess the decarbonisation of the combined British Columbia and Alberta electricity system. It is found that high levels of decarbonisation are possible through a combination of new wind generation, particularly in Alberta, and increased trade between Alberta, British Columbia, and the United States. Following on this finding, the variability related to high penetrations of renewable generation is introduced to the model and its impact is assessed. These results indicate that variability will be an important constraint in planning decarbonized energy systems. Finally, the representation of British Columbia’s existing hydroelectric resources is expanded to determine the ability to buffer variable renewable generation with these resources. This study finds that, while existing hydroelectric resources can support much of the variability in a highly renewable energy system, additional technologies and/or policies are needed to reach a fully zero-carbon system. The findings in this thesis show that British Columbia and Alberta, with an expanded interconnection between the provinces, can reach high penetrations of variable renewable energy. The majority of this generation consists of wind energy in Alberta, which is abundant and low-cost compared to other generation options. While comparatively little generation is added in British Columbia, the existing hydroelectric resources in the province provide significant flexibility to support the variability of this wind generation. Graduate 2020-01-14T21:13:04Z 2020-01-14T21:13:04Z 2019 2020-01-14 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1828/11483 J. English et al., “Impact of electrical intertie capacity on carbon policy effectiveness,” Energy Policy, vol. 101, pp. 571–581, 2016 J. English et al., “Flexibility requirements and electricity system planning: Assessing inter-regional coordination with large penetrations of variable renewable supplies,” Renewable Energy, vol. 145, pp. 2770-2782, 2020 English en Available to the World Wide Web application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language English
en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Energy systems
Optimization
Renewable energy
Technoeconomic modelling
spellingShingle Energy systems
Optimization
Renewable energy
Technoeconomic modelling
English, Jeffrey
Decarbonization pathways for the western Canadian electricity system
description Decarbonizing the electricity system (i.e. eliminating generation from fossil fuels and replacing it with non-emitting sources) is widely considered a necessary step to limiting anthropogenic emissions and minimizing the impacts of climate change. Selecting which non-emitting generators should replace existing fossil fuel sources, and when to build them, is critical to the success of this transition. The optimal pathway to decarbonisation is highly region-specific. It is impacted by both factors such as availability of renewable resources, existing generation resources, and government policy. This dissertation presents a techno-economic model that is used to assess the decarbonisation of the combined British Columbia and Alberta electricity system. It is found that high levels of decarbonisation are possible through a combination of new wind generation, particularly in Alberta, and increased trade between Alberta, British Columbia, and the United States. Following on this finding, the variability related to high penetrations of renewable generation is introduced to the model and its impact is assessed. These results indicate that variability will be an important constraint in planning decarbonized energy systems. Finally, the representation of British Columbia’s existing hydroelectric resources is expanded to determine the ability to buffer variable renewable generation with these resources. This study finds that, while existing hydroelectric resources can support much of the variability in a highly renewable energy system, additional technologies and/or policies are needed to reach a fully zero-carbon system. The findings in this thesis show that British Columbia and Alberta, with an expanded interconnection between the provinces, can reach high penetrations of variable renewable energy. The majority of this generation consists of wind energy in Alberta, which is abundant and low-cost compared to other generation options. While comparatively little generation is added in British Columbia, the existing hydroelectric resources in the province provide significant flexibility to support the variability of this wind generation. === Graduate
author2 Rowe, Andrew Michael
author_facet Rowe, Andrew Michael
English, Jeffrey
author English, Jeffrey
author_sort English, Jeffrey
title Decarbonization pathways for the western Canadian electricity system
title_short Decarbonization pathways for the western Canadian electricity system
title_full Decarbonization pathways for the western Canadian electricity system
title_fullStr Decarbonization pathways for the western Canadian electricity system
title_full_unstemmed Decarbonization pathways for the western Canadian electricity system
title_sort decarbonization pathways for the western canadian electricity system
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/11483
work_keys_str_mv AT englishjeffrey decarbonizationpathwaysforthewesterncanadianelectricitysystem
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