Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Beyond the Death Spiral
Transitioning to renewable energy in WA Bill Grace
2
The Death Spiral While this picture identifies some of the feedback processes, it misses some (eg utilities lose revenue but also have reduced costs) and can’t quantify the effects. Only simulation of a dynamic model can do this.
3
Context
4
Recent Energy Demand and Intensity
Both peak demands and average network load have plateaued in recent years System capacity is around 40% higher than peak demand Energy prices have been, and will continue to rise Electricity use per $ of Gross State Product is dropping at around 1% pa
5
Growth of household solar
6
Solar arrays increasing in size
Commercial systems starting to come on line
7
Unit cost of solar PV Private storage is on the horizon
Source: Solar Choice Private storage is on the horizon
8
A systems dynamics model of the SWIS
10
Main monthly model used to produce results at the economy wide scale
Main monthly model used to produce results at the economy wide scale. Draws on information in a separate hourly model.
11
Demand assumptions Economic growth of 3% pa;
Population growth (represented by housing growth) of 2.1% pa; The recent reductions in energy intensity (approximately 1% pa) continue
12
Uptake of solar and storage
Solar cost curve (excl STCs) Storage cost curve Take-up rate
13
Initial demand
14
Initial household solar
2.4 kW solar – no storage Model assumes no business solar initially
15
Model results – solar growth with storage
16
~50% 60% Residential Solar premises Commercial Solar premises Ave 5.3 kW Ave 10.6 kWh Ave 110 kW Ave 174 kWh Solar capacity Storage capacity
17
Solar growth AEMO forecast Model result
18
Source: US DoE Source: Bloomberg Source: Sunwiz
19
Implications
20
Network impacts – solar + storage
Maximum hourly network loads January day network loads (2034)
21
Network loads Minimum hourly network loads
Solar only Solar + storage Minimum hourly network loads Percentage of hours in each month that network loads reach over-generation and zero generation points
22
What will happen? When private solar energy generation exceeds total demand? Curtailed by the network operator - no network storage capacity Zero marginal cost, emission free power would be substituted by highly polluting, expensive fossil fuel based generation This would be a perverse outcome!
23
Towards 100% renewables
24
Blakers (NEM) Wind and PV contributes about 90% of annual electricity, while existing hydroelectricity and biomass contributes about 10%. Historical data for demand for NEM demand remains stable at 205 TWh per year Batteries are excluded (although “batteries located in homes and electric cars may contribute very substantially to future energy storage”)
25
Blakers (NEM) Demand 205,000 GWh Rooftop solar 17,000 MW (currently ~ 4,500 MW) Utility solar 6,000 MW Wind 45,000 MW Hydro 7,400 MW Biomass 600 MW Storage 450,000 MWh (pumped hydro)
26
SEN Scenario 3 Demand = 2014 values x 1.26 = 23,000 GWh by 2030
Wind 6,000 MW Solar PV 3,000 MW OCGT (bio-oil) 3,300 MW Total 12,300 MW Battery storage 8,000 MWh PH storage 42,000 MWh
27
Grace By 2030 6,000 MW private solar = 9,400 GWh
i.e. 37% of projected demand By 2050 20,000 MW solar = 32,000 GWh !! i.e. 85% of projected demand if it can be stored and shared In future most energy will be generated onsite
28
The duck curve
29
100% renewables by 2030
30
100% renewables by 2040
31
100% renewables by 2050 2050
32
Consider 100% renewables by 2050
33
By 2020 Renewables meeting 22% of demand Storage
1,550 MW private solar (2,500 GWh) 635 MW wind generation (2,105 GWh) - LRET target of 23.5% Storage 135 MWh onsite battery storage No network storage
34
2020 system
35
2020 system January day July day
36
By 2030 Renewables meeting 50% of demand Storage
6,000 MW private solar (10,000 GWh) 750 MW wind generation (2,500 GWh) Storage 5,000 MWh onsite battery storage No network storage – avoided by additional wind generation
37
2030 system
38
2030 system January day July day
39
By 2040 Renewables meeting 75% of demand Storage
13,000 MW private solar (20,500 GWh) 750 MW wind generation (2,500 GWh) Storage 18,000 MWh onsite battery storage 22,000 MWh network storage
40
2040 system
41
2040 system January day July day
42
2040 system storage
43
By 2050 Renewables meeting 100% of demand Storage
20,000 MW private solar (32,000 GWh) 2,250 MW wind generation (7,500 GWh) 2,500 MW OCGT fuelled by renewables Storage 32,000 MWh onsite battery storage 32,000 MWh network storage
44
2050 system
45
2050 system January day July day
46
2050 system Network storage
47
Technologies
48
Large scale renewables
49
What’s available when you need it?
January day July day
50
Impact on network storage
Meeting the residual network loads using large scale solar PV requires double the amount of storage as is required for a wind resource Wave energy could be a valuable complement to wind energy, as its constancy is very high and its performance during the winter is superior to other sources Similar results with 2,250 MW wind, or 1,500 MW wind MW wave
51
Thermal generation Required to avoid massive storages in winter / spring SEN - state of the art ‘aero-derivative’ turbines with the capability to run on bio-diesel derived from oil mallee Biogas also a possibility By 2050 Perth households will be producing around 4.5m tonnes of organic wastes Enough biogas to generate around 1,000 GWh of electricity, (60% of the projected requirement) If organic wastes from wastewater treatment plants and animal manure are added, it is likely that biogas could provide most or all of the feedstock necessary Simultaneously reducing greenhouse gas emissions from the natural decomposition of organics in landfill.
52
Network storage Pumped hydro the logical technology (SEN & Blakers)
Cliff-top ponds and the ocean Perth’s water supply dams - now almost redundant as sources of supply 40% of the capacity of just 5 dams would provide 32,000 MWh storage Lower reservoirs and turbines only needed
53
A fully integrated electricity system
54
The world as we knew it Image from AEMO
55
Future integrated energy system 100% renewable energy by 2050
Large scale battery storage Wind / wave / tidal Transmission s/station Distribution s/station CSP Household and business solar & battery storage Large scale energy storage
56
Key questions to be answered
Shift the network focus from distribution to management (incl voltage and frequency control) Integrate network management and operation (fundamental re-design of the WEM) Integrate the LRET and SRES Work out how to pay for network storage
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.