Title: Modeling Representation of Brazil Baseline and Mitigation Scenarios
1 Modeling Representation of Brazil Baseline and
Mitigation Scenarios
- Latin America Modeling and Scenarios Workshop
Emilio Lèbre La Rovere emilio_at_ppe.ufrj.br Rio de
Janeiro, Brazil September 13-14, 2006
2General Background from Modeling Exercises in
CentroClima/COPPE/UFRJ and Modeling Tools
- International Initiatives for Mitigation Costs
Assessments (Common Methodological Framework) - 1) Riso/UNEP Centre (RISO) and LNBL
- Technological Optimisation Model TOM
MARKAL-like LP energy system optimization model - 2) CIRED/EHESS (Paris)
- NEXUS-IMACLIM (Macro framework)
- 3) PNNL/EPA
- Second Generation Model - SGM
3General Background from Modeling Exercises in
CentroClima/COPPE/UFRJ and Modeling Tools
- 4) Development and Climate Project
- MESSAGE
- MAED
- 5) CCAP (Center for Clean Air Policy) Dialogue
on Future International Actions to Address Global
Climate Change
4Dialogue on Future International Actions to
Address Global Climate Change (FAD)
- Brings together senior climate negotiators from
approx. 15 developed and 15 developing countries - Informal, off-the-record forum to discuss options
for future international climate framework - CCAP produces FAD working papers and will produce
a compendium in 2006 on the project and options
discussed. - For all presentations and working papers from the
process, see http//www.ccap.org/International_Pr
ogram.htmFAD
5MAJOR FEATURES OF THE BRAZILIAN ECONOMY - 2002
- GDP of US 500 billions
- Population of 174 millions inhabitants
- GDP/cap of US 2,800
- Land Area of 8.5 millions km2
6GHG Emissions in Brazil
- 1st National Communication Inventory of
- Brazilian GHG Emissions in 1990-1994
- CO2 emissions from LULUCF three times higher
than emissions from the energy system - GHG emissions from cattle raising activities
nearly equal to CO2 emissions from fossil fuels - Medium and long-term prospects
- CO2 emissions from energy will be dominant
7Challenges in Land-use Change Emissions
- Deforestation drivers go far beyond economic
factors - Key drivers from social policies
- Lack of access to land x agrarian reform
- Governance
- land-use planning x enforcement of laws
regulations - How far will Amazon deforestation go?
- Huge potential for reforestation of degraded land
(30 million hectares).
8Energy demand and Intensity
9Domestic Energy Supply
10Primary Energy Consumption2002
11Domestic Energy Supply (DES) 2002
12CO2 Emissions from Energy
13CO2 Emissions from Energy - 2002
14Sectoral Emissions
15Brazilian Electrical System
16Electricity Generation Capacity in 2002 (Grid)
17Carbon Intensity
18Scenarios
19Driving Forces
- Demography
- Economy
- International Oil Price
- Technology
- Energy Policy
20GDP and Population
21Demographic Indicators
22Methodological Tools Economy
23Income Distribution in A2
24Income Distribution in B2
25Structure of the economy in A2
26Structure of the economy in B2
27Methodological Tools Energy Demand
28Methodological Tools Energy Supply
29Scenario Assumptions for Industrial Sectors
30A2 Scenarios Energy Consumption Industry
31B2 Scenarios Energy Consumption Industry
32CO2 Emissions from the use of Fossil Fuels in
Industry
33Transportation AssumptionsLight Vehicles
34A2 Scenarios Light Vehicles
35B2 Scenarios Light Vehicles
36CO2 Emissions from Light Vehicles
37Transportation Assumptions Heavy Duty Vehicles
1 /3
38Transportation Assumptions Heavy Duty Vehicles
2 / 3
39Transportation Assumptions Heavy Duty Vehicles
3 /3
40A2 Scenarios Heavy Duty
41B2 Scenarios Heavy Duty
42CO2 Emissions from Heavy Duty
43Assumptions for Residential Sector (Households)
44A2 Scenarios Households
45B2 Scenarios Households
46CO2 Emissions from the use of Fossil Fuels in
Households
47Assumptions for the Services Sector (includes
Commerce, Communications, Private and Public
Services)
48Energy Consumption from Services Sector
49CO2 Emissions from the use of Fossil Fuels in the
Services Sector
50Results for Power Sector
51CO2 Emissions from Power Sector
52MAC Curves Power Sector
53Total CO2 Emissions - Energy System
54Conclusion Additional Policies
- Energy efficiency in industry and transport
- Natural gas in industry residential and
commercial sectors - Hydropower potential to be tapped
- Ethanol domestic production exports
- Biodiesel in transport sector
- Renewable power generation in remote areas
(access to electricity for rural population)
55Main Methodological Issues in the Brazilian
Context
- Reliability of Economic Data
- hyperinflation from late 70s to 1994
- uncertainties on input/output coefficients,
price elasticities, interest rates - skewed income distribution
- informal economy
- Specificities of National Circumstances
- energy resources endowment relevance of
hydropower (250,000 MW, only 20 tapped) and of
biomass (wood, charcoal, ethanol from sugarcane,
vegetal oils) - relevance of emissions from land-use change
deforestation is the most important source in
the short term -
56Arbitrary Exogeneous Assumptions
- 1) Technical Change in Energy and Non-Energy
sectors - Capital stock turnover
- Autonomous energy efficiency improvements AEEI
(particularly Government and household AEEI) - Fuel mix electricity, oil products, gas, biomass
x consumption patterns from different income
distributions - 2) General Economic Theoretical Background
- Labour productivity growth
- Types of production functions
57Treatment of Market Imperfections
- Methodological challenge are short-term market
imperfections temporary or need structural change
in the modeling? How far will power sector
reforms go ? How long will it take to achieve
them? - Different agents have different expected returns
on investments (eg natural gas x oil, power
generation from sugarcane bagasse x increased
sugar and/or ethanol production) - Financial constraint upfront costs x financial
market imperfections
58Relevance of Biomass in Brazil
- Share in total energy supply 30 (2004)
- Main biomass energy resources wood, charcoal,
sugarcane bagasse, rice husks, ethanol from
sugarcane, vegetal oils, biodiesel - Agricultural land availability
- Land used by agriculture sector 50 million ha
- Land used by sugar cane crops 5 million ha
- Estimated land for ethanol production 2.5
million ha - Total Brazilian agricultural land 140 million ha
(exclusive of land suitable for forest
plantations) - Land still available for agriculture 90 million
ha.
59Challenges for addressing Bioenergy
- Disaggregation of biomass primary resources and
secondary fuels - Links between biofuels and international
commodities markets (eg ethanol x sugar,
biodiesel x castor oil, palm oil, soybeans)
effects of price subsidies, WTO rounds, large
scale bioenergy programs on international prices
of feedstocks and final products.
60Challenges in Land-use Change Emissions
- Deforestation drivers go far beyond economic
factors - Key drivers from social policies
- Lack of access to land x agrarian reform
- Governance
- land-use planning x enforcement of laws
regulations - How far will Amazon deforestation go?
- Huge potential for reforestation of degraded land
(30 million hectares).
61Conclusions and Recommendations
- Highlights of some key issues, not an exaustive
recollection (need for systematic treatment of
different methodological challenges) - Further research needed for improvement of model
treatment of these issues - Expert judgement is crucial to adapt modeling
frameworks to different regional contexts.