Dual Impacts of Space Heating Electrification and Climate Change Increase Uncertainties in Peak Load Behavior and Grid Capacity Requirements in Texas

Author:

Ssembatya Henry12ORCID,Kern Jordan D.3ORCID,Oikonomou Konstantinos4,Voisin Nathalie45ORCID,Burleyson Casey D.4ORCID,Akdemir Kerem Ziya1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Civil, Construction, and Environmental Engineering North Carolina State University Raleigh NC USA

2. Department of Forestry and Environmental Resources North Carolina State University Raleigh NC USA

3. Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering North Carolina State University Raleigh NC USA

4. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Richland WA USA

5. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Washington Seattle WA USA

Abstract

AbstractAround 60% of households in Texas currently rely on electricity for space heating. As decarbonization efforts increase, non‐electrified households could adopt electric heat pumps, significantly increasing peak (highest) electricity demand in winter. Simultaneously, anthropogenic climate change is expected to increase temperatures, the potential for summer heat waves, and associated electricity demand for cooling. Uncertainty regarding the timing and magnitude of these concurrent changes raises questions about how they will jointly affect the seasonality of peak demand, firm capacity requirements, and grid reliability. This study investigates the net effects of residential space heating electrification and climate change on long‐term demand patterns and load shedding potential, using climate change projections, a predictive load model, and a direct current optimal power flow (DCOPF) model of the Texas grid. Results show that full electrification of residential space heating by replacing existing fossil fuel use with higher efficiency heat pumps could significantly improve reliability under hotter futures. Less efficient heat pumps may result in more severe winter peaking events and increased reliability risks. As heating electrification intensifies, system planners will need to balance the potential for greater resource adequacy risk caused by shifts in seasonal peaking behavior alongside the benefits (improved efficiency and reductions in emissions).

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Reference75 articles.

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