Minimizing habitat conflicts in meeting net-zero energy targets in the western United States

Author:

Wu Grace C.1ORCID,Jones Ryan A.23,Leslie Emily4ORCID,Williams James H.5ORCID,Pascale Andrew6,Brand Erica7,Parker Sophie S.7,Cohen Brian S.7,Fargione Joseph E.8,Souder Julia9,Batres Maya7,Gleason Mary G.7,Schindel Michael H.10ORCID,Stanley Charlotte K.7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Environmental Studies, University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA 93106

2. Evolved Energy Research, Denver, CO 80211

3. Energy & Resources Group, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720

4. Montara Mountain Energy, Pacifica, CA 94044

5. Energy Systems Management, University of San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94117

6. School of Chemical Engineering, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD 4072, Australia

7. The Nature Conservancy, Sacramento, CA 95811

8. The Nature Conservancy, Minneapolis, MN 55415

9. JASenergies, San Francisco, CA 94117

10. The Nature Conservancy, Portland, OR 97214

Abstract

The scale and pace of energy infrastructure development required to achieve net-zero greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions are unprecedented, yet our understanding of how to minimize its potential impacts on land and ocean use and natural resources is inadequate. Using high-resolution energy and land-use modeling, we developed spatially explicit scenarios for reaching an economy-wide net-zero GHG target in the western United States by 2050. We found that among net-zero policy cases that vary the rate of transportation and building electrification and use of fossil fuels, nuclear generation, and biomass, the “High Electrification” case, which utilizes electricity generation the most efficiently, had the lowest total land and ocean area requirements (84,000 to 105,000 km 2 vs. 88,100 to 158,000 km 2 across all other cases). Different levels of land and ocean use protections were applied to determine their effect on siting, environmental and social impacts, and energy costs. Meeting the net-zero target with stronger land and ocean use protections did not significantly alter the share of different energy generation technologies and only increased system costs by 3%, but decreased additional interstate transmission capacity by 20%. Yet, failure to avoid development in areas with high conservation value is likely to result in substantial habitat loss.

Funder

Bernard and Anne Spitzer Foundation

Cedar Tree Foundation

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference40 articles.

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