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NetZero America Presentation at Tufts 5 Mar 2021
- CREATE Solutions Speaker Series at Tufts Fletcher School Study done by Princeton Univ Dec 15 2020https://environmenthalfcentury.princeton.edu
- NetZero America: Potential Pathways, Infrastructure and Impacts
- E. Larson, C. Grieg, J. Jenkins, E. Mayfield, A. Pascal, C Zhang et al
- we use roughly 5 exajoules
- 5 modeled least-cost paths to net-zero in 2050 show implications on different approaches
- no new policies
- High electrification (E+)
- 76% less oil and gas than 2020
- Less high electrification (E-)
- Less electrification, high biomass (E-, B+)
- more biomass used to supplant fossil fuels
- High electrification, constrained RE (E+, RE-)
- less biomass to minimize land use problems associated w/ increased biomass
- Relies on nuclear power and more natural gas w/ carbon capture
- High electrification, all RE by 2050 (E+, RE+)
- 100% renewable
- Fossil and nuclear 100% prohibited
- Biomass w/ carbon capture and direct air capture
- 4 key building blocks to all of these options
- end use energy efficiency and electrification
- Clean electricity (wind, solar — w/ nuclear and biomass w/ carbon
- Net zero carbon fuels
- Carbon capture
- Good News
- although transformations are large, all are affordable
- We eventually spend the same or less on energy as total of GDP by 2050
- Challenge 1: significant upfront mobilization of capital and labor
- $2.5T over next decade
- $830B on wind, solar
- $530B on distribution
- $420B on buildings and appliances
- $360B in industry
- $130B on Options creation
- $250b on vehicles
- Challenge 2: trade offs, not aggregate cots, more real options mean greater probability of success
- no one scenario dominates
- Fundamental trade offs in each of them, which challenges are easiest to overcome?
- May need to keep all options open
- For example: where electricity more than doubles, solar and wind are cornerstones for each path
- Need to deploy 600 gigawatts in next decade
- We did 35 last year, would need to get up to 55-60 on average
- need to triple the transmission system
- While wind_solar are critical, you have to solve for intermittency (clean_firm)
- nuclear or biomass or hydrogen or natural gas + carbon capture
- Learn from Texas issues
- Need roughly 500 GW of firm power sources
- Challenge 3: all politics is local, decision support needs to offer gradual guidance and politically silent results
- affordability and distribution of benefits and costs across the country
- Most states see net growth in energy-related employee net (500k in next decade, 2-3M by 2050)
- But major shifts in local economies must be managed
- Princeton study identifies states where conversion will be most problematic and requires support
- 200k - 300K premature deaths avoided thru 2050 by a net zero transition (avoids $2-3T in damages) ## Questions##
- How might offshore wind positively impact these models?
- What assumptions about capacity? The