JP

Abstract: The objective of this paper is to assess an economic dispatch considering a power system portfolio, which includes predominant amount of hydro power and increasing quantities of intermittent renewables in relation to the total electric capacity. With growing importance of intermittent wind and solar generation taking part into power systems worldwide, there is need for greater chronological resolution to estimate the flexibility of the power system to offer firm capacity.

In this way, a linear optimization model operating hourly is developed to calculate the minimum power system cost, while stablishing the capacity allocation to meet the projected load throughout one-year simulation, as an estimation of how the hourly economic dispatch impacts the scheduling of generators belonging to a power system with this portfolio composition. A central focus is how to operate the available hydro capacity to back up intermittent renewables, evaluating the physical hydro operating constraints, monthly energy balance and maximum power availability.

A case study was simulated based on the Brazil’s power system configuration, showing that existing hydro capacity provide hourly flexibility to back-up intermittent renewables, potentially saving 1.2 Billion R$, about 3.6% of total system cost referred to 2019. It is worthwhile to realize that the developed methodology can be employed to other power systems with similar capacity portfolio structure for the purpose of calculating its optimum allocation for a specified region and target year.

Abstract: An open source computer algorithm, the Surface Energy Balance Algorithm for Land-Improved (SEBALI), was designed to estimate actual evapotranspiration (ET) at a basin level. In this study, we build on later versions of SEBALI/SEBALIGEE to estimate ET at a 30-m resolution for any scale application using advanced machine learning approaches (SEBALIGEE v2). We evaluate the monthly ET estimated from the new algorithm across several fluxnet sites in US, China, Italy, Belgium, Germany, and France, yielding an Absolute Mean Error (AME) of 0.41 mm/day versus 0.48 mm/day in the original SEBALIGEE. Analyses of the ET in the US indicate that the annual wheat ET decreases significantly between 2013 and 2021 (p < 0.05), accompanied by a significant air temperature increase. Net solar radiation is found to be the most influencing factor on ET of corn and soybeans with R2 values of ~0.72.

Abstract: Understanding impacts of renewable energy on air quality and associated human exposures is essential for informing future policy. We estimate the impacts of US wind power on air quality and pollution exposure disparities using hourly data from 2011-2017 and detailed atmospheric chemistry modeling.

Wind power associated with Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS) in 2014 resulted in $2.0 billion in health benefits from improved air quality. 29% and 32% of these health benefits accrued to  racial/ethnic minority and low income populations respectively, below a 2021 target by the Biden administration that 40% of overall benefits of future federal investments flow to disadvantaged communities. Wind power worsened exposure disparities among racial and income groups in some states, but improved them in others.

Health benefits could be up to $8.4 billion if displacement of fossil fuel generators prioritized those with higher health damages. However, strategies that maximize total health benefits would not mitigate pollution disparities, suggesting more targeted measures are needed.

The preeminent conference for the advancement of Earth and space sciences, the AGU (American Geophysical Union) Fall Meeting draws more than 25,000 attendees from over 100 countries each year to share research findings and identify innovative solutions to complex problems. Organized around the theme “Science Leads the Future,” this year’s AGU Fall Meeting will take place in Chicago and online on December 12 - 16.

Abstract: Scenarios developed for wide use in the research community have played a prominent role for decades. Community scenarios reduce the duplication of effort that would occur if all research groups were left to develop their own projections of societal and environmental conditions on which to base their analyses. They also encourage the development of a broad scientific literature that shares common assumptions about future underlying trends, making it possible to synthesize results from a large number of studies to draw conclusions about possible future conditions.

However, research needs have evolved over time, and current frameworks need to evolve with them. Most existing frameworks focus on providing qualitative and quantitative inputs to models and other analyses rather than producing outcomes of interest in common metrics across studies. As a result, we have only a piecemeal understanding of the risks to society and ecosystems from the co-evolution of climate change impacts and responses, changes in other environmental conditions, and changing societal conditions. In addition, most scenario research focuses on biophysical or managed systems, rather than on outcomes for societal well-being. It also employs a relatively narrow range of scenario methods.

We describe a plan for the development of a new scenarios framework for use by the Multi-Sector Dynamics and related research communities that would address these gaps by being organized around the goal of understanding future outcomes for societal well-being and resilience, and sensitivities of these outcomes to multiple possible stressors. It would allow for the analysis of multiple issues, and employ new systematic techniques of exploratory modeling and scenario discovery for developing scenarios and characterizing their uncertainty.

The framework would be developed with input from the community of researchers and scenario users. Key products would include both a large, searchable database of quantified scenarios for analysis and use in individual research projects, as well as a small set of alternative scenarios for wide use across the community. We envision this framework as complementary to, not a replacement for, existing frameworks such as the SSPs in that those scenarios could be mapped to, and incorporated in, the MSD framework (and vice-versa).

    Pages

    Subscribe to JP