Title: MODELLING A RESILIENT UK ENERGY SYSTEM
1MODELLING A RESILIENT UK ENERGY SYSTEM
- Sussex Energy Group Seminar
- UK Energy security What do we know, and what
should be done? - 27 January 2009
- Jim Skea, Modassar Chaudry, Kannan Ramachandran
and Anser Shakoor
2UKERC Energy 2050 Project
- The UKERC Energy 2050 project aims to show how
the UK can move towards a low-carbon energy
system over the next forty years .... the project
focuses on the two primary goals of UK energy
policy achieving an 80 per cent reduction in
carbon emissions by 2050 and ensuring that energy
is delivered reliably.
3Broad Methodology
- underpinned by high-level core scenarios
- set of scenario variants which address key
energy policy issues - a range of UKERC models are the integrating
analytical tools.but no direct coupling of
different models - four cross-centre working groups owning
specific issues/workstreams and scenario
variants - energy supply
- energy demand
- energy markets and security
- energy policy
4Core Scenarios
ENERGY SYSTEM ATTRIBUTES
Resilience
Low Carbon
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5UKERC Energy 2050 workstreams
- Pathways to a Low Carbon Energy System
- Technology acceleration
- Energy security and resilience
- Lifestyle and Consumption
- Environmental Sensitivities
- (Global Energy Markets)
- (De-centralised energy systems)
6Modelling Tools
- System level models
- MARKAL Elastic Demand (MED) a technology rich
linear optimisation model of the integrated UK
energy system, including a wide range of supply
and demand side responses - E3MG econometric model, which can be used to
forecast changes in economic structure, the
energy system and associated environmental
impacts - Network Industry Models
- WASP Wien Autonomous System Planning Model
electricity generation planning (mixed integer
programming) - CGEN Combined gas and electricity network
non-linear - Energy Demand Sectoral Models
- Domestic buildings
- Non-domestic buildings
- Transport
7SECTORAL MODELS
Energy service demands
MARKAL-MED
Electricity demand
Gas demand
WASP
System shocks
Resilience indicators
Generation mix
CGEN
Infrastructure
8Security and resilience workstream
- Agree resilience indicators
- Experiment with models to assess interaction
between indicators and determine interesting
quantitative specification - Formalise resilient energy system scenarios
- Use models to assess technology choices/costs
associated with resilience and compare with low
carbon scenarios - Based on literature review, determine a plausible
set of energy system shocks with a 2025 time
horizon - Subject reference, low carbon and resilient
energy systems to these shocks - Assess costs and advantages of resilience (not a
formal CBA as no probabilities attached to
shocks, nor do they represent full set of
possibilities) - Policy analysis
9Resilience Indicators
Resilience is the capacity of an energy system
to tolerate disturbance and to continue to
deliver affordable energy services to consumers.
A resilient energy system can withstand shocks
and provide alternative means of satisfying
energy service needs in the event of changed
external circumstances.
- Supply
- Diversity of primary supply
- Diversity of fuel inputs for electricity
generation - Demand
- Reduced final energy demand (and hence exposure
to energy prices) - Infrastructure
- Diversity of import options
- Storage (coal, oil and gas)
- Capacity margins in the network industries
- Redundancy in network infrastructure
10Quantification of resilience
- Supply
- No single energy source to take up more than 40
of primary energy supply - No single energy source to take up more than 40
of electricity generation mix - (we note HHI diversity index as model output but
cannot use to constrain runs) - Demand
- UK final energy demand roughly 1.25 annual
decline after 2010 (3.2 decline relative to GDP) - (in early years this is roughly compatible with
an assumption of the high impact of additional
policies from Updated Energy and Carbon
Emissions Projections November 2008) - Infrastructure
- Diversity of import options (can use HHI index as
a constraint) - Storage - hard-wired
- Capacity margins in the network industries
11Resilience and low-carbon scenarios key
indicators for 2025 relative to 2000
Resilience
Primary energy demand -20 Final energy demand
-16 Electricity demand 0 Residential demand
-34 Max primary share 39 Max genmix share
40 CO2 emissions -19 CO2 intensity power
464g/kWh Welfare costs
Low Carbon
Primary energy demand -13 Final energy demand
-2 Electricity demand 8 Residential demand
-9 Max primary share 44 Max genmix share
25 CO2 emissions -30 CO2 intensity power
188g/kWh Welfare costs
Primary energy demand -20 Final energy demand
-16 Electricity demand -7 Residential
demand -30 Max primary share 39 Max genmix
share 40 CO2 emissions -30 CO2 intensity
power 360g/kWh Welfare costs
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12Carbon intensity of grid electricity
13Key conclusions
- the low-carbon scenario contributes to reduced
energy (import) dependence, but does not go far
enough to meet overall security goals - the resilient scenario reduces CO2 emissions, but
does not go far enough to stay on the pathway to
the 2050 80 reduction goal - reduced energy demand is the key to resilience,
electricity sector de-carbonisation to low carbon - the residential sector is critical in reducing
energy/import dependence - the electricity sector is also key to diversity
cheap alternatives allow either diverse or low
carbon generation mixes to make big contributions
to overall goals - there is remarkably little progress in
electricity de-carbonisation in the resilience
scenario, and progress is slower if resilience
constraints are added to the low carbon scenario - in the reference scenario, diversity of primary
energy (just) meets the resilience
constraint....the generation mix does not. - in the low carbon scenario, diversity of primary
energy fails to meet the resilience
constraint....generation mix is most diverse in
the pure low carbon scenario because of the
uptake of nuclear power.
14The shocks....
- Oil
- Review of past events suggests manifested in
elevated prices on timescale of months-years - 200/barrel (with gas price consequences) for 5
years - Gas
- Review of past events suggests manifested in
curtailment/elevated prices on timescale of
weeks-months - Loss of Easington terminal at start of winter
(knocks out Langeled pipeline from Norway plus
Rough storage) - Electricity
- Review of past events suggests manifested in
curtailment on timescale of hours-days - Specific shocks under development
15Crude oil prices 1861 -2007
Source BP Statistical review of world energy 2008
16(No Transcript)
17Future work
- UKERC Phase I
- model the shocks
- cost-advantage analysis
- policy analysis
- UKERC Phase II
- more work on the external context within which
the UK operates - deeper analysis of the relative contributions
that individual indicators make to security - investigation of the contribution of demand side
measures to energy system resilience - more formal use of diversity indices
Herfindahl-Hirschman Index Stirling index with
different levels of disparity between
technologies/supply sources
18UK Energy Research Centre
www.ukerc.ac.uk