Loading…

Impact of CO2 prices on the design of a highly decarbonised coupled electricity and heating system in Europe

•Combined impacts of transmission and coupling electricity-heating sectors analysed.•Installing large renewable energy capacities is not enough to achieve low CO2 emissions.•CO2 tax incentivises an efficient and highly decarbonised electricity-heating system. Ambitious targets for renewable energy a...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Applied energy 2019-02, Vol.236, p.622-634
Main Authors: Zhu, K., Victoria, M., Brown, T., Andresen, G.B., Greiner, M.
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:•Combined impacts of transmission and coupling electricity-heating sectors analysed.•Installing large renewable energy capacities is not enough to achieve low CO2 emissions.•CO2 tax incentivises an efficient and highly decarbonised electricity-heating system. Ambitious targets for renewable energy and CO2 taxation both represent political instruments for decarbonisation of the energy system. We model a high number of coupled electricity and heating systems, where the primary sources of CO2 neutral energy are from variable renewable energy sources (VRES), i.e., wind and solar generators. The model includes hourly dispatch of all technologies for a full year for every country in Europe. In each model run, the amount of renewable energy and the level of CO2 tax are fixed exogenously, while the cost-optimal composition of energy generation, conversion, transmission and storage technologies and the corresponding CO2 emissions are calculated. We show that even for high penetrations of VRES, a significant CO2 tax of more than 100 €/tCO2 is required to limit the combined CO2 emissions from the sectors to less than 5% of 1990 levels, because curtailment of VRES, combustion of fossil fuels and inefficient conversion technologies are economically favoured despite the presence of abundant VRES. A sufficiently high CO2 tax results in the more efficient use of VRES by means of heat pumps and hot water storage, in particular. We conclude that a renewable energy target on its own is not sufficient; in addition, a CO2 tax is required to decarbonise the electricity and heating sectors and incentivise the least cost combination of flexible and efficient energy conversion and storage.
ISSN:0306-2619
1872-9118
DOI:10.1016/j.apenergy.2018.12.016