LAPSE:2023.13630
Published Article

LAPSE:2023.13630
Teaching Power-Sector Models Social and Political Awareness
March 1, 2023
Abstract
Energy-system scenarios are widely used to relate the developments of the energy supply and the resulting carbon-emission pathways to political measures. To enable scenario analyses that adequately capture the variability of renewable-energy resources, a specialised type of power-sector model (PSM) has been developed since the beginning of this century, which uses input data with hourly resolution at the national or subnational levels. These models focus on techno-economic-system optimisation, which needs to be complemented with expert socioeconomic knowledge in order to prevent solutions that may be socially inacceptable or that oppose political goals. A way to integrate such knowledge into energy-system analysis is to use information from framework scenarios with a suitable geographical and technological focus. We propose a novel methodology to link framework scenarios to a PSM by applying complexity-management methods that enable a flexible choice of base scenarios that are tailored to suit different research questions. We explain the methodology, and we illustrate it in a case study that analyses the influence of the socioeconomic development on the European power-system transition until 2050 by linking the power-sector model, REMix (renewable-energy mix), to regional framework scenarios. The suggested approach proves suitable for this purpose, and it enables a clearer link between the impact of political measures and the power-system development.
Energy-system scenarios are widely used to relate the developments of the energy supply and the resulting carbon-emission pathways to political measures. To enable scenario analyses that adequately capture the variability of renewable-energy resources, a specialised type of power-sector model (PSM) has been developed since the beginning of this century, which uses input data with hourly resolution at the national or subnational levels. These models focus on techno-economic-system optimisation, which needs to be complemented with expert socioeconomic knowledge in order to prevent solutions that may be socially inacceptable or that oppose political goals. A way to integrate such knowledge into energy-system analysis is to use information from framework scenarios with a suitable geographical and technological focus. We propose a novel methodology to link framework scenarios to a PSM by applying complexity-management methods that enable a flexible choice of base scenarios that are tailored to suit different research questions. We explain the methodology, and we illustrate it in a case study that analyses the influence of the socioeconomic development on the European power-system transition until 2050 by linking the power-sector model, REMix (renewable-energy mix), to regional framework scenarios. The suggested approach proves suitable for this purpose, and it enables a clearer link between the impact of political measures and the power-system development.
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Keywords
complexity management, energy system, energy transition, framework scenarios, power-sector model, socioeconomic scenarios, uncertainty reduction
Subject
Suggested Citation
Garcia-Teruel A, Scholz Y, Weimer-Jehle W, Prehofer S, Cao KK, Borggrefe F. Teaching Power-Sector Models Social and Political Awareness. (2023). LAPSE:2023.13630
Author Affiliations
Garcia-Teruel A: German Aerospace Center (DLR), Institute of Networked Energy Systems, Curiestr. 4, 70563 Stuttgart, Germany [ORCID]
Scholz Y: German Aerospace Center (DLR), Institute of Networked Energy Systems, Curiestr. 4, 70563 Stuttgart, Germany [ORCID]
Weimer-Jehle W: Center for Interdisciplinary Risk and Innovation Studies (ZIRIUS), University Stuttgart, Seidenstraße 36, 70174 Stuttgart, Germany [ORCID]
Prehofer S: Center for Interdisciplinary Risk and Innovation Studies (ZIRIUS), University Stuttgart, Seidenstraße 36, 70174 Stuttgart, Germany [ORCID]
Cao KK: German Aerospace Center (DLR), Institute of Networked Energy Systems, Curiestr. 4, 70563 Stuttgart, Germany [ORCID]
Borggrefe F: German Aerospace Center (DLR), Institute of Networked Energy Systems, Curiestr. 4, 70563 Stuttgart, Germany
Scholz Y: German Aerospace Center (DLR), Institute of Networked Energy Systems, Curiestr. 4, 70563 Stuttgart, Germany [ORCID]
Weimer-Jehle W: Center for Interdisciplinary Risk and Innovation Studies (ZIRIUS), University Stuttgart, Seidenstraße 36, 70174 Stuttgart, Germany [ORCID]
Prehofer S: Center for Interdisciplinary Risk and Innovation Studies (ZIRIUS), University Stuttgart, Seidenstraße 36, 70174 Stuttgart, Germany [ORCID]
Cao KK: German Aerospace Center (DLR), Institute of Networked Energy Systems, Curiestr. 4, 70563 Stuttgart, Germany [ORCID]
Borggrefe F: German Aerospace Center (DLR), Institute of Networked Energy Systems, Curiestr. 4, 70563 Stuttgart, Germany
Journal Name
Energies
Volume
15
Issue
9
First Page
3275
Year
2022
Publication Date
2022-04-29
ISSN
1996-1073
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Original Submission
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PII: en15093275, Publication Type: Journal Article
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LAPSE:2023.13630
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https://doi.org/10.3390/en15093275
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