DocumentCode :
1398724
Title :
From Regions to Stacks: Spatial and Temporal Downscaling of Power Pollution Scenarios
Author :
Hobbs, Benjamin F. ; Hu, Ming-Che ; Chen, Yihsu ; Ellis, J. Hugh ; Paul, Anthony ; Burtraw, Dallas ; Palmer, Karen L.
Author_Institution :
Johns Hopkins Univ., Baltimore, MD, USA
Volume :
25
Issue :
2
fYear :
2010
fDate :
5/1/2010 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
1179
Lastpage :
1189
Abstract :
National energy models produce aggregate scenarios of generation capacity, energy output, and emissions. However, we need finer scales to study the impact of resource use and air pollution because timing and location determine impacts on sensitive ecosystems and human populations. We present a framework for disaggregating emissions projections to a scale compatible with air quality simulation models. The framework comprises three models that site new power plants consistent with historical patterns while recognizing water, transmission, fuel, and other factors that constrain siting, and then dispatches them consistent with those constraints. The resulting hourly emissions from individual plants are consistent with meteorology, in that peak demands and emissions occur during those hours when temperatures associated with such demands occur. Further, annual emissions vary in a way consistent with year-to-year changes in weather. An application of the framework disaggregates 2030 NO?? emissions from a national electricity model in an eight-state region under two climate scenarios: no climate change ("1990s") and accelerated change ("2050s"). Between-year variations in emissions patterns under a particular climate exceed differences between average patterns of the two scenarios. This is in part because NOx emissions are capped; thus, the total cannot change, only its distribution over time and space.
Keywords :
air pollution; climate mitigation; nitrogen compounds; power generation dispatch; NO; accelerated change; air pollution; air quality simulation models; climate change; gas emissions; generation capacity; generation dispatch; power pollution scenario; Air pollution; Haiku; climate change; dispatch; environment; generation expansion; power plant siting;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Power Systems, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0885-8950
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TPWRS.2009.2036801
Filename :
5401079
Link To Document :
بازگشت