Title :
Environmental externality surcharges in power system planning: a case study of New England
Author :
Busch, J.F. ; Krause, Florentin L.
Author_Institution :
Lawrence Berkeley Lab., California Univ., Berkeley, CA, USA
fDate :
8/1/1993 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
In several states, public utility commissions have adopted surcharges for environmental externalities (adders) to be used in electric utility planning. The Massachusetts adder system applies major surcharges to emissions of sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, and carbon dioxide. The authors explore the implications in terms of cost and emissions of using the Massachusetts adders as shadow prices in dispatching the pooled electric power system in New England. The analysis has use of a probabilistic production cost simulation model to estimate the effects on the present system, and on a resource mix envisioned 15 years hence. The externality cost adders are used to influence the dispatch of a fixed configuration of power plants and are not used to affect the composition of the future resource mix. Compared to conventional dispatch, emissions of SO2 and NOx drop by 10% to 15%, while carbon emissions remain virtually unaffected. The production cost penalty is 3% to 4%. In each year, reductions are accomplished mainly by shifting generation away from New England´s coal steam power plants
Keywords :
air pollution; carbon compounds; nitrogen compounds; power system planning; sulphur compounds; CO2 emissions; Massachusetts adder system; NOx emissions; New England; SO2 emissions; carbon dioxide; coal steam power plants; environmental externality surcharges; load dispatching; nitrogen oxides; pooled electric power system; power system planning; probabilistic production cost simulation model; public utility commissions; sulfur dioxide; Analytical models; Carbon dioxide; Costs; Dispatching; Nitrogen; Power generation; Power industry; Power system planning; Power system simulation; Production systems;
Journal_Title :
Power Systems, IEEE Transactions on