Affiliation:
1. Joint Global Change Research Institute Pacific Northwest National Laboratory College Park MD USA
2. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering Tufts University Medford MA USA
3. Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge MA USA
Abstract
AbstractDeep human‐Earth system uncertainties and strong multi‐sector dynamics make it difficult to anticipate which conditions are most likely to lead to higher or lower adoption of renewable energy, and models project a broad range of future solar and wind energy shares across future scenarios. To elucidate these dynamics, we explore a large data set of scenarios simulated from the Global Change Analysis Model (GCAM), and use scenario discovery to identify the most significant factors affecting solar and wind adoption by mid‐century. We generated a data set of over 4,000 scenarios from GCAM by varying 12 different socioeconomic factors at high and low levels, including assumptions about future energy demand, resource costs, and fossil fuel emissions paths, as well as specific technology assumptions including wind and solar backup requirements and storage costs. Using scenario discovery, we assess the most important factors globally and regionally in creating high fractions of solar and wind energy and explore interconnected effects on other systems including water and non‐CO2 emissions. Globally and regionally, we found that solar and wind‐related technology costs were the primary drivers of high wind and solar energy adoption, though a few regions depend heavily on other parameters like carbon capture and storage costs, population and gross domestic product trajectories, and fossil fuel costs. We also identify four key paths to high solar and wind energy by mid‐century and discuss their tradeoffs in terms of other outcomes.
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)
Subject
Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),General Environmental Science
Cited by
2 articles.
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