u.s. electric power generation planning under endogenous learning-by-searching technology change...
TRANSCRIPT
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U.S. Electric Power Generation Planning under Endogenous Learning-by-Searching Technology Change
Tuesday, October 11, 2011Session 31: Electricity Demand Modeling and Capacity Planning
USAEE/IAEE North American Conference, Washington DC
Nidhi R. Santen, Massachusetts Institute of Technology ([email protected])Mort D. Webster, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
David Popp, Syracuse University/National Bureau of Economic Research
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Introduction (1 of 2)
EIA, AER 2009; EIA 2011
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Introduction (2 of 2)
Power System Technology R&D
(Public and Private)
Government
Makes Environmental Policies
Electric Utilities
Build Power Plants Using Available Generation Technologies
NaturalEnvironment
1. Constraining Regulations2. Production Support
Direct R&D Support
New or Improved
Generation Technologies
Increased Demand for
Technologies
CO2 Emissions
Two main policy pathways to reduce cumulative power sector emissions
“Now v. Later”“Adoption v. Innovation”
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Research Question and Outline
Research Question:What is the socially optimal balance of inter-temporal regulatory policy andtechnology-specific R&D expenditures for the U.S. electricity generation sector, given aspecific cumulative climate target?”
Outline for Today’s Presentation1. Overview of existing electricity sector planning models’ capabilities2. Introduction of the current modeling framework3. Snapshots from first results4. Future research5. Summary
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1. Overview of Existing Numerical Power Generation Expansion Models (1 of 2)
Top-Down v. Bottom-up Models• Top-Down: Use Average Costs and Assume Capacity Factors• Bottom-Up: Use Specific Costs (e.g., Capital, O&M, Fuel) and Solve for Capacity Factors
Rigorously studying emissions potentials from the power sector requires modeling operational details of the physical system (more easily resolved in bottom-up models).
Including Operational
Realism Matters!
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1. Overview of Existing Numerical Power Generation Expansion Models (2 of 2)
Common Methods to Model Technology Change and Learning Dynamics
Decision Variables: Capacity Additions
1. (Exogenous) Fixed Trend:CapCostt,g = CapCostt-1,g*(1+ α)
2. (Endogenous) Learning-by-Doing:CapCostt,g = InitialCapCostg / (CapitalStockt,g)LBDCoeff
Decision Variables: Capacity Additions + R&D Investments
3. (Endogenous) Learning-by-Searching:CapCostt,g = InitialCapCostg / (KnowledgeStockt,g)LBSCoeff
KnowledgeStockt,g = δΣ1:t-1R&D$t,g + R&D$t,g
4. 2-Factor Learning Curves (2FLC):CapCostt,g = InitialCapCostg / [(CapitalStockt,g)LBDCoeff2 *
(KnowledgeStockt,g)LBSCoeff2]
KnowledgeStockt,g = δΣ1:t-1R&D$t,g + R&D$t,g
Numerical Models
Representation of Technology Improvement
Fixed Time Trends (Exogenous)
Learning by Doing
(Endogenous)
Learning by Researching
(Endogenous)
NREL ReEDS X X
Gen Star Lite (Ramos et.
al./IIT)X
SMART (Powell et. al) X
MIT EPPA (Electricity
Sector)X (Modified)
IIASA ERIS (Electricity
Sector)X (Limited)
EPA/MIT MARKAL
(Electricity)X
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Knowledge Stock (H)
R&D$
New Knowledge (h)
Generation Planning Inputs
Generation Technology
Costs ($/MWh)
Electricity Demand
(MW/time)
Generation Technology Availability
(Year)
Learning by Experience
Technology Change Module
“Innovation Possibilities
Frontier”
ht = aRD$bHΦ
Environmental Policy
New Power Plant Additions
(GW)
Production (GWh)
Learning by Researching
2. Modeling Framework for this Research
Generation Planning Model
CO2 Emissions (Million Metric Tons)
Generation Planning Model
Ht,g = (1-δ)Ht-1,g + ht,g
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2. Modeling Framework for this Research
Structural Details
• Centralized, social planning (decision-support model)• Representative technologies of the U.S. system• Representative U.S. load duration curve• 50-year planning horizon, 10-year time steps
• Objective
• Decision Variables (per period)(1) R&D $ (by Technology)(2) Carbon Cap(3) Generation Expansion(4) Generation Operation
• Key Constraints(1) All traditional generation expansion constraints (e.g., demand balance,
reliability, non-cycling nuclear technology, etc.)(2) Cumulative carbon cap(3) Cumulative R&D funding account balance
Generation Technologies
CoalSteam Gas
Wind
Advanced CoalGas CCNuclear
Solar
Coal w CCSGas CTHydroOther
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3. First Results: With and Without Learning-by-Searching (under a Medium Cumulative Emissions Target)
No LBS
With LBS (NPVLBS < NPVNoLBS)
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3. First Results: Medium v. Strong Cumulative Emissions Target
Medium Target
Strong Target
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3. First Results: Sensitivity of Innovation Possibilities Parameters (Strong CCS Possibilities under a Medium Emissions Target)
Base Case Innovation Possibilities
Strong CCS Innovation Possibilities
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4. Future Research
Model optimal generation (carbon cap distribution) and R&D investment decisions under multiple uncertain innovation possibilities using stochastic dynamic programming
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Summary
• Studying how to balance regulatory efforts and R&D efforts for the electricity generation sector requires a decision model where the capital costs of technology change endogenously with respect to new builds (adoption) and new research (innovation)
• Rigorous study of emissions management from the power sector requires operational details of the physical system, embodied within bottom-up type models.
• Results confirm both a “tradeoff” and “interaction” between adoption v. innovation for technologies with strong learning potentials (dynamics that are popular in the theoretical literature)
• More research needs to be done to 1) understand the sensitivity of innovation parameters on decisions, 2) compare these results with more traditional knowledge stock formulations, and 3) model the effect of uncertainty of returns to research on near-term regulatory and R&D decisions.
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Thank You
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Source: US EPA E-Grid Database & NPR.org
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Barreto, L. and S. Kypreos. (2004). “Endogenizing R&D and market experience in the "bottom-up" energy-systems ERIS model,” Technovation, 24(8):615-629.
Fischer, C. and R. G. Newell. (2008). “Environmental and technology policies for climate mitigation.” Energy Economics 55: 142-162.
Hobbs, B. F. (1995). “Optimization methods for electric utility resource planning.” European Journal of Operational Research 83:1-20.
Ibenholt, K. (2002). “Explaining learning curves for wind power,” Energy Policy 30: 1181-1189. Jaffe, A., and M. Trajtenberg. (2002). Patents, citations, & innovations: a window on the knowledge economy. MIT Press:
Cambridge, MA, 478pp. Johnstone, N., Hascic, I, and D. Popp. (2010). “Renewable Energy Policies and Technological Innovation: Evidence Based
on Patent Counts,” Environmental Resource Econ, 45: 133-155. Messner, S. (1997). “Endogenized technological learning in an energy systems model,” J Evol Econ 7: 291-313. Miketa, A. and L. Schrattenholzer. (2004). “Experiments with a methodology to model the role of R&D expenditures in
energy technology learning processes.” Energy Policy, 32(15):1679-1692. Popp, D. (2002). “Induced Innovation and Energy Prices.” American Economic Review 92(1): 160-180. Popp, D. (2006). “ENTICE-BR: Backstop Technology in the ENTICE Model of Climate Change.” Energy Economics 28(2):
188-222. Popp, D. (2006b). “They Don't Invent Them Like They Used To: An Examination of Energy Patent Citations Over Time.”
Economics of Innovation and New Technology 15(8): 753-776.
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References
Title Slide Photo Credits (from left to right): (1) www.scientificamerican.com (2) http://www.pelamiswave.com (3) Sandia National Labs (4) http://www.metaefficient.com (5) http://img.dailymail.co.uk (6) https://inlportal.inl.gov