The Impact of Neglecting Climate Change and Variability on ERCOT's Forecasts of Electricity Demand in Texas

被引:6
|
作者
Lee, Jangho [1 ]
Dessler, Andrew E. [1 ]
机构
[1] Texas A&M Univ, Dept Atmospher Sci, College Stn, TX 77843 USA
关键词
Climate change; Climate variability; Societal impacts; CONSUMPTION;
D O I
10.1175/WCAS-D-21-0140.1
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
The Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) manages the electric power across most of Texas. They make short-term assessments of electricity demand on the basis of historical weather over the last two decades, thereby ignoring the effects of climate change and the possibility of weather variability outside the recent historical range. In this paper, we develop an empirical method to predict the impact of weather on energy demand. We use that with a large ensemble of climate model runs to construct a probability distribution of power demand on the ERCOT grid for summer and winter 2021. We find that the most severe weather events will use 100% of available power-if anything goes wrong, as it did during the 2021 winter, there will not be sufficient available power. More quantitatively, we estimate a 5% chance that maximum power demand would be within 4.3 and 7.9 GW of ERCOT's estimate of best-case available resources during summer and winter 2021, respectively, and a 20% chance it would be within 7.1 and 17 GW. The shortage of power on the ERCOT grid is partially hidden by the fact that ERCOTs seasonal assessments, which are based entirely on historical weather, are too low. Prior to the 2021 winter blackout, ERCOT forecast an extreme peak load of 67 GW. In reality, we estimate hourly peak demand was 82 GW, 22% above ERCOT's most extreme forecast and about equal to the best-case available power. Given the high stakes, ERCOT should develop probabilistic estimates using modern scientific tools to predict the range of power demand more accurately.
引用
收藏
页码:499 / 505
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Impact of climate change on Spanish electricity demand
    Jose M. Garrido-Perez
    David Barriopedro
    Ricardo García-Herrera
    Carlos Ordóñez
    [J]. Climatic Change, 2021, 165
  • [2] The impact of climate change on electricity demand in Australia
    Emodi, Nnaemeka Vincent
    Chaiechi, Taha
    Beg, A. B. M. Rabiul Alam
    [J]. ENERGY & ENVIRONMENT, 2018, 29 (07) : 1263 - 1297
  • [3] Impact of climate change on Spanish electricity demand
    Garrido-Perez, Jose M.
    Barriopedro, David
    Garcia-Herrera, Ricardo
    Ordonez, Carlos
    [J]. CLIMATIC CHANGE, 2021, 165 (3-4)
  • [4] Impact of climate change on sectoral electricity demand in Turkey
    Guven, Denizhan
    Kayalica, M. Ozgur
    Kayakutlu, Gulgun
    Isikli, Erkan
    [J]. ENERGY SOURCES PART B-ECONOMICS PLANNING AND POLICY, 2021, 16 (03) : 235 - 257
  • [5] Impact of climate change on electricity systems and markets - A review of models and forecasts
    Chandramowli, Shankar N.
    Felder, Frank A.
    [J]. SUSTAINABLE ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES AND ASSESSMENTS, 2014, 5 : 62 - 74
  • [6] Analyzing the impact of climate change on future electricity demand in Thailand
    Parkpoom, Suchao
    Harrison, Gareth P.
    [J]. IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON POWER SYSTEMS, 2008, 23 (03) : 1441 - 1448
  • [7] Climate change impacts on electricity demand
    Parkpoom, S
    Harrison, GP
    Bialek, J
    [J]. UPEC 2004: 39th International Universitities Power Engineering Conference, Vols 1-3, Conference Proceedings, 2005, : 1342 - 1346
  • [8] Climate change and electricity demand in California
    Guido Franco
    Alan H. Sanstad
    [J]. Climatic Change, 2008, 87 : 139 - 151
  • [9] Climate change and electricity demand in California
    Franco, Guido
    Sanstad, Alan H.
    [J]. CLIMATIC CHANGE, 2008, 87 (Suppl 1) : S139 - S151
  • [10] Climate change impacts on electricity demand in Turkey
    Comert, Mustafa
    Yildiz, Ali
    [J]. 2019 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND DATA PROCESSING (IDAP 2019), 2019,