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Consecuencias del cambio climático en la oferta y demanda de energía
Pedro Linares
Real Academia de Ingeniería
Madrid, 8 de abril de 2014
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Cambio climático y energía Climate change is projected to reduce energy demand for heating and increase energy demand for cooling in the residential and commercial sectors (robust evidence, high agreement). Climate change is projected to affect energy sources and technologies differently, depending on resources (e.g., water flow, wind, insolation), technological processes (e.g., cooling), or locations (e.g., coastal regions, floodplains) involved.
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Muchas vías de influencia Cambio
Climático
Temperatura Precipitación Eventos extremos
Agua
Demanda Energética
Suministro Energético
Recurso Energético
Glaciares Demanda
Eficiencia
Mi1gación
Refrigeración
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Pero no demasiada evidencia
A W O R L D B A N K S T U D Y
Jane Ebinger, Walter Vergara
K E Y I S S U E S F O R E N E R G Y S E C T O R A D A P TAT I O N
Climate Impacts on Energy Systems
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Demanda de energía • Demanda de calefacción:
– Reducción del 34% a 2100 • Demanda de aire acondicionado
– Aumento del 72% en 2100 • Variación regional
World Bank Study38
This U-shaped paĴ ern suggests that climate change may have ambiguous conse-quences for future energy demand, with the overall balance for energy demand varying regionally and seasonally (Figure 3.3).
This kind of analysis is usually studied using the concept of heating degree days and cooling degree days. Heating degree days is the sum of negative deviations of the actual temperature from the base temperature over a given period of time. The base temperature is defi ned as the temperature level where there is no need for either heating or cooling.26 Cooling degree days is the sum of positive deviations between the actual temperature and the base temperature.
This energy impact is not restricted to modifi cations in the accumulated temper-ature deviations from a base value (the degree days). Additional demand for energy could arise from energy inputs for heating and cooling equipment. This additional en-ergy demanded could be expressed by the coeĜ cient of performance (COP) of the ap-paratus, with represents the relation between the useful energy extracted and the energy consumed (usually in electric power devices, such as compressors). According to the fundamental heat equation,27 the amount of useful energy is directly proportional to the change in temperature. Therefore, assuming that the coeĜ cient of performance of cooling and heating equipment doesn’t change, an increase in the temperature variation increases the number of hours the apparatus is working, in turn raising energy consumption.
Global Demand
At the global level there are few studies that model heating and cooling demand in rela-tion to the present climate and future climate change.28 Isaac and Vuuren (2009) aĴ empt-ed to estimate climate impacts on global energy demand through end use (heating and cooling) by using simplifi ed relationships based on the activity, structure, and intensity eě ects. In this study, heating energy demand decreased by 34 percent worldwide by 2100 as a result of climate change, and air-conditioning energy demand rose by 72 percent.
Figure 3.3. Relationship between Building Energy Use and the Outdoor Temperature
Source: Guan, 2009.
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Tecnologías energéticas
Temperatura Agua
Térmicas Eficiencia Refrigeración
Hidráulica Otras demandas Menor producible Cambio patrón
Eólica Variabilidad Densidad energ. -‐
Solar Eficiencia Refrigeración
Biomasa Incierto Bajada de rdto.
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Tecnologías: Agua y CO2
Climate Impacts on Energy Systems 43
Most climate change impact assessments focus on water availability. A few studies also include comparisons with projected demand to test the vulnerability of water sup-ply (for example, Arnell, 1999; Dvorak et al., 1997; Joyce et al., 2005; LeĴ enmaier et al.; 1999; Wilby et al., 2006). In general, however, there is limited aĴ ention on the demand side. Changes in land use, higher water demand for crop irrigation, and population shifts caused by climate change are some of the issues that can aě ect the demand for water resources (Frederick and Major, 1997). Multiple uses of water resources (such as human and animal consumption, irrigation, ecosystem maintenance, and fl ood control) add signifi cant complexity to energy modeling. Similarly, it adds a large amount of un-certainty to climate impact assessments on energy systems.
The 2009 Market Report by Lux Research, “Global Energy: Unshackling Carbon From Water,” examined the carbon and water intensity of power production and as-sociated tradeoě s (Figure 3.4). It highlights the challenge of simultaneously reducing GHG emissions and limiting water consumption. Power production from solar PV and wind resources, for example, have the least carbon and water intensity but suf-
Figure 3.4. Effect of Emerging Technologies on Carbon and Water Intensity of Electricity Sources
Source: Lux Research, 2009.
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Hidráulica Climate Impacts on Energy Systems 31
rison and WhiĴ ington, 2002; Vicuña et al., 2005).6 The river fl ow series is simulated in hydrological models, which are in turn calibrated to current climate but forced with climate variables (normally from downscaled GCM data), such as precipitation and tem-perature for selected emission scenarios.
The modeling tools for analyzing climate impacts on a hydropower system ulti-mately depend on the complexity of the system, for which two factors can be highlighted (Lucena et al., 2009b). The fi rst is how relevant hydropower generation is for the whole power system, in other words, whether hydroelectricity is complementary to (for ex-ample, the United States and Western Europe) or complemented by (for example, Brazil and Norway) other power sources. If hydroelectricity is complementary to other gener-ating sources, average values for hydropower production generally provide a suĜ cient measure of climate impact. On the other hand, power systems fundamentally based in hydropower must be assessed in terms of a more conservative indicator, such as fi rm power,7 to minimize the risk of power shortages.
The second factor relates to geographical dispersion and the level of integration through transmission capacity. Transmission may play an important role in coping with regional climate variations in interconnected hydropower systems that cover a vast area. In Brazil and Colombia, for example, electricity transmission networks help to optimize the power system’s operation by compensating for regionally diě erent seasonal varia-tions (Lucena et al., 2010b; UPME 2009). In such a case, just as the operation of diě erent
Box 3.1. Projected Changes in Hydropower Generation
Modeling by the Norwegian University of Science and Technology examined climate impacts on river fl ows and hydropower generation to 2050. Systems at highest risk had both a high dependence on hydropower generation for electricity and a declining trend in runoff. South Africa is quoted as one example with a potential reduction of 70 GWh per year in generation by 2050. Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Venezuela, and parts of Brazil face similar challenges.
Source: Hamududu and Killingtveit, 2010.
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Eventos extremos
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¿Y en España?
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Consumo residencial (2012)
Calefacción
ACS
Cocina
Iluminación
Aire Acondicionado
Electrodomés1cos
Fuente: IDAE
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Algunos pasos recomendables • Diversificación • Ahorro energético • Infraestructuras robustas • Redes inteligentes (también para agua) • En todo caso,
For most economic sectors, the impacts of drivers such as changes in population, age structure, income, technology, relative prices, lifestyle, regulation, and governance are projected to be large relative to the impacts of climate change (medium evidence, high agreement)
IPCC, 2014
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