@misc{27936, author = {Lisa C Schwartz and Max Wei and William R Morrow III and Jeff Deason and Steven R Schiller and Greg Leventis and Sarah Josephine Smith and Woei Ling Leow and Todd Levin and Steven Plotkin and Yan Zhou and Joseph Teng}, title = {Electricity end uses, energy efficiency, and distributed energy resources baseline}, abstract = {

A newly released study from a task force of federal agencies, led by U.S. Department of Energy, provides a roadmap for federal energy policy objectives, legislative proposals to Congress, Executive actions, and potential research and development, financing and incentive programs. The second installment of the Quadrennial Energy Review (QER) focuses on the modernization of the electricity system toward accomplishing three national goals: improving the economy, protecting the environment and increasing national security.

Berkeley Lab contributed a foundational analysis underlying the QER—a detailed analysis of electricity consumption by market sector, including cost, technology, and other trends. It looked at energy efficiency and distributed energy resources, like rooftop solar, and their impact on electricity supply and demand. The report, Electricity End Uses, Energy Efficiency, and Distributed Energy Resources Baseline, also describes the benefits of these resources as well as barriers to their adoption by examining a number of policies and programs. An appendix to the report reviews innovations in evaluation, measurement and verification to assess their impact.

The U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Energy Policy and Systems Analysis funded the Berkeley Lab report. Argonne National Lab contributed a chapter on transportation electrification.

Among the key findings in the report:

Cross-sector

Electricity-consuming equipment and buildings

Industry

Electric transportation

Distributed energy resources

}, year = {2017}, month = {01/2017}, }