Designing diversified renewable energy systems to balance multisector performance

Author:

Gonzalez Jose M.ORCID,Tomlinson James E.,Martínez Ceseña Eduardo A.,Basheer MohammedORCID,Obuobie Emmanuel,Padi Philip T.,Addo Salifu,Baisie Rasheed,Etichia Mikiyas,Hurford AnthonyORCID,Bottacin-Busolin Andrea,Matthews JohnORCID,Dalton JamesORCID,Smith D. Mark,Sheffield Justin,Panteli MathaiosORCID,Harou Julien J.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractRenewable energy system development and improved operation can mitigate climate change. In many regions, hydropower is called to counterbalance the temporal variability of intermittent renewables like solar and wind. However, using hydropower to integrate these renewables can affect aquatic ecosystems and increase cross-sectoral water conflicts. We develop and apply an artificial intelligence-assisted multisector design framework in Ghana, which shows how hydropower’s flexibility alone could enable expanding intermittent renewables by 38% but would increase sub-daily Volta River flow variability by up to 22 times compared to historical baseload hydropower operations. This would damage river ecosystems and reduce agricultural sector revenues by US$169 million per year. A diversified investment strategy identified using the proposed framework, including intermittent renewables, bioenergy, transmission lines and strategic hydropower re-operation could reduce sub-daily flow variability and enhance agricultural performance while meeting future national energy service goals and reducing CO2 emissions. The tool supports national climate planning instruments such as nationally determined contributions (NDCs) by steering towards diversified and efficient power systems and highlighting their sectoral and emission trade-offs and synergies.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Nature and Landscape Conservation,Urban Studies,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment,Ecology,Geography, Planning and Development,Food Science,Global and Planetary Change

Reference73 articles.

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3. World Energy Outlook 2021 (IEA, 2021).

4. Olauson, J. et al. Net load variability in Nordic countries with a highly or fully renewable power system. Nat. Energy 1 (2016).

5. Yang, W. et al. Burden on hydropower units for short-term balancing of renewable power systems. Nat. Commun. 9, 1–12 (2018).

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