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Energy Modeling and Economics

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Obtain state of the art insight in energy modeling and (energy) ... CPB's Energy demand model NEMO. CPB's Electricity Market model ElMar. The power sector ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Energy Modeling and Economics


1
Energy Modeling and Economics
  • Dr. Jeroen van der Sluijs
  • J.P.vanderSluijs_at_chem.uu.nl

2
Goals
  • Obtain state of the art insight in energy
    modeling and (energy) resource economics
  • Learn basic principles of modeling energy-economy
    systems
  • Understand some basic modeling approaches and
    techniques and their strengths and weaknesses
  • Develop the skill to critically analyze and
    reflect on (model-based) economic assessment
    studies on energy systems

3
Overview of the course
  • Week 1-3 Lectures on basic concepts and
    approaches to energy economy modelling (several
    guest-lectures)
  • Week 4-5 TIMER model (Bas van Ruijven, Detlef
    van Vuuren Bert de Vries)
  • Week 6 Uncertainty methods
  • Week 7 Markal Model (Lars Dittmar Machteld
    van den Broek)
  • Week 8 Model comparison assignment
  • Week 9-10 Integrative assignment

4
  • Lectures
  • Wk 1
  • Introduction World Energy Assessment 2004
  • Long term Energy-Economy scenarios
  • Top-down Energy Modelling
  • Energy forecasting models based on Engineering
    Economics
  • Wk 2
  • Modeling the economy
  • Integrated Assessment models, an introduction
  • Input-Output Modeling
  • Bottom-up vs Top Down models
  • Wk 3
  • IKARUS
  • CPB's Energy demand model NEMO
  • CPB's Electricity Market model ElMar
  • The power sector

5
Week 4-8 Diving into models and techniques
  • Models
  • TIMER
  • MARKAL
  • Techniques
  • Linear optimization
  • Sensitivity Analysis Monte Carlo
  • NUSAP, pedigree analysis
  • Model Comparison Exercise

6
Week 9-10Integrative assignment
  • In groups of 6 students
  • Take a recent Energy Economy study that figured
    in the policy debate
  • Write a critical review of that study using the
    insights from the course on strengths and
    limitations of energy economy models
  • Focus on controversies and their background
  • Cases
  • Peak oil controversy
  • Wind Energy on the North Sea
  • ?????

7
Course materials
  • Reader
  • www.blackboard.uu.nl
  • Assignments
  • Power Points

8
Assessment
  • Halfway exam (week 6) about reader and lectures
    of first 3 weeks (30)
  • Model Comparison Assignment (week 8) (30)
  • Integrative Assignment (week 9 10) (40)

9
World Energy Assessment Energy and the challenge
of sustainability (2000 update 2004)
  • The United Nations Development Programmes (UNDP)
  • The United Nations Department of Economic and
    Social Affairs (UNDESA)
  • The World Energy Council (WEC)

10
WEA definition Sustainable Energy
  • Energy produced and used in ways that support
    human development over the long term, in all its
    social, economic, and environmental dimensions
  • Production and use of energy resources in ways
    that promote-or at least are compatible
    with-long-term human well-being and ecological
    balance.

11
Dimensions Sustainable Development
  • Economic
  • Social
  • Ecological

12
Sustainability of energy supply socio-economic
dimensions
  • Access to energy sources varies between countries
    and between groups within countries
  • Dependence on import of energy sources that are
    un-equally distributed over the globe
  • Vulnarability of energy supply (disasters,
    black-outs)
  • Depletion of (scarce) energy sources, need to
    timely develop alternatives.

13
Economic dimension
  • Meet elementary human needs
  • Competitive position
  • Innovative capacity
  • Fair distribution
  • Efficiency
  • Costs and benefits

14
Social dimensions
  • Participation
  • Social cohesion
  • Public support for policies
  • Safety of groups, workers, and individuals
  • Institutional developments
  • Keep options open for future generations

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18
Ecological dimension
  • Conservation of biodiversity
  • Health (humans, animals, ecosystems)
  • Carrying capacity ecosystems
  • Clean
  • Safe
  • Responsible management of risks

19
  • Unsustainabilty of current energy system
  • Modern fuels and electricity are not universally
    accessible, an inequity that has moral,
    political, and practical dimensions in a world
    that is becoming increasingly interconnected.
  • The current energy system is not sufficiently
    reliable or affordable to support widespread
    economic growth. The productivity of one-third of
    the world's people is compromised by lack of
    access to commercial energy, and perhaps another
    third suffer economic hardship and insecurity due
    to unreliable energy supplies.
  • Negative local, regional, and global
    environmental impacts of energy production and
    use threaten the health and well-being of current
    and future generations.

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22
Relationship between Human Development Index and
per capita energy use, 1999/2000
23
Per capita energy use (commercial and
non-commercial), by region, 2000
24
Trends
  • 2/year growth in primary energy use
  • Compared to 1998, world wide energy use will have
    doubled in 2035, and tripled in 2055
  • Past 30 year growth in lower developed countries
    was 3.5x bigger than in OECD countries
  • This has not lead to a more fair distribution of
    energy use per capita

25
World primary energy use and reserves,
2001 Note 1 exajoule 1018 joule
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29
amount of energy (EJ) ?
Reserves Consumption in period 1985-2025

oil
natural gas
coal
uranium
renewables
Proven reserves ( commercially exploitable) for
oil, natural gas, coal and uranium (Shell, 1990)
and the world energy consumption in the period
1985-2025 (IPCC, 1990A). In this scenario, the
reserves of oil and natural gas known at present
are nearly exhausted in 2025. Source RIVM,
Bilthoven, NL, 1991.
30
Question What means Business-as-Usual More
coal in the fossil fuel mix (IPCC-1999A), or more
natural gas (IIASA) ?
1600 GtC in 1990-2100


31
World primary energy use and reserves,
2001 Note 1 exajoule 1018 joule
32


natural gas
oil
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34
Proven reserves
  • Four Questions / steps
  • 1. What is the probability that a certain
    amount R is available of a specific energy
    carrier (Geological Reserve, GR), and what part
    of it is called proven.
  • 2. What part of the proven GR can be exploited
    with present day technology? (Technical
    Exploitable Reserve, TER).
  • 3. What part of TER can be exploited at
    competitive costs? (Economic Exploitable Reserve,
    EER).
  • 4. Does the energy carrier fulfill quality
    requirements, such that it can be consumed in an
    acceptable manner?

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41
Expectations of experts in 1981 1988
concerning development of crude oil price
42
Unit July 2005
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46
Notions on energy and development
  • Energy ladder
  • Environmental Kuznets Curve (EKC)
  • Principle of structural change
  • Dematerialisation

47
Energy Ladder
48
Fraction of non-commercial fuels in secondary
energy use in the SRES models Evaluation of
application of the Energy Ladder in Global Energy
Models
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50
A
B
Gini coefficient is calculated from the ratio of
surfaces A/(AB)
51
GDP might not be the best indicator in energy
economy modeling
GINI coefficients vs. GDP/capita for 121
countries (higher GINI indicates a more unequal
income distribution). Data for different years
between 1990 and 2001, data from the World Bank
WDI (2004)
52
GINI coefficient in the World
53
Environmental Kuznets Curve
54
CO2 emissions per capita plotted against income
(2000 data). The different GDPs account for the
lower income, lower middle, upper middle and high
income classes (Data from World Development
Indicators, World Bank, 2005) (Van Ruijven and
Urban, in prep.).
55
Sulphur emission projections for ASIA from the
IPCC/SRES models Evaluation of application of
the Environmental Kuznets Curve in Global Energy
Models
56
Structural change
stages in the share of employment or value added
of agriculture, manufacturing and services, based
on (Jung et al., 2000)
57
Typical intensity of use curve of resources with
economic development, based on (de Vries et al.,
2001)
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60
  • Factors driving patterns of energy use
  • Shift from non-commercial to commercial forms of
    energy, industrialisation, and motorisation
    initially increase the commercial energy-GDP
    ratio.
  • As industrialisation proceeds and incomes rise,
    saturation effects expansion of the service
    sector decrease ratio of commercial energy to GDP
    after it reaches a peak. Maximum has been passed
    by many countries, but not by low-income
    developing countries.
  • As a result of world-wide technology transfer and
    diffusion, energy efficiency improvements can be
    the main limiting factor in the growth of energy
    demand arising from increasing populations and
    growing production and incomes.

61
  • Factors driving patterns of energy use
    (continued)
  • The more efficient use of materials in
    better-quality, well-designed, miniaturised
    products, the recycling of energy-intensive
    materials, and the saturation of bulk markets for
    basic materials in industrialised countries
    contribute to additional decreases in energy
    intensity.
  • In developing countries, technological
    leapfrogging to the use of highly efficient
    appliances, machinery, processes, vehicles, and
    transportation systems offers considerable
    potential for energy efficiency improvements.
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