Electricity generation technologies: Comparison of materials use, energy return on investment, jobs creation and CO2 emissions reduction

被引:38
|
作者
Kis, Zoltan [1 ]
Pandya, Nikul [1 ]
Koppelaar, Rembrandt H. E. M. [2 ]
机构
[1] Imperial Coll London, Dept Chem Engn, Fac Engn, South Kensington Campus, London SW7 2AZ, England
[2] Scene Connect Ltd, 465c Hornsey Rd, London N19 4DR, England
关键词
Electricity technology comparison; Net electricity; Electricity generation supply chain; Electricity generation jobs; Electricity generation greenhouse gas emissions; PHOTOVOLTAIC SOLAR-SYSTEMS; LIFE-CYCLE ASSESSMENT; INPUT-OUTPUT-ANALYSIS; NATURAL-GAS; ASSESSMENT LCA; BRIDGE FUEL; EROI; REGIONS; CHALLENGES; EFFICIENCY;
D O I
10.1016/j.enpol.2018.05.033
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Shifting to a low-carbon electricity future requires up-to-date information on the energetic, environmental and socio-economic performance of technologies. Here, we present a novel comprehensive bottom-up process chain framework that is applied to 19 electricity generation technologies, consistently incorporating 12 life-cycle phases from extraction to decommissioning. For each life-cycle phase of each technology the following 4 key metrics were assessed: material consumption, energy return ratios, job requirements and greenhouse gas emissions. We also calculate a novel global electricity to grid average for these metrics and present a metric variability analysis by altering transport distance, load factors, efficiency, and fuel density per technology. This work quantitatively supports model-to-policy frameworks that drive technology selection and investment based on energetic-economic viability, job creation and carbon emission reduction of technologies. The results suggest energetic-economic infeasibility of electricity generation networks with substantial shares of: i) liquefied natural gas transport, ii) long distance transport based hard and brown coal and pipeline natural gas, and iii) low-load factor solar-photovoltaic, concentrated solar power, onshore and offshore wind. Direct sector jobs can be expected to double in renewable-majority scenarios. All combustion-powered technologies without natural (bio-mass) or artificial carbon capture (fossil fuels) are not compatible with a low carbon electricity generation future.
引用
收藏
页码:144 / 157
页数:14
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