The Environmental and Public Health Benefits of Achieving High Penetrations of Solar Energy in the United States
Date Published |
05/2016
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Publication Type | Report
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Authors | |
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LBL Report Number |
LBNL-1004373
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Abstract |
This study finds that a future U.S. electricity system in which solar plays a major role—14% of demand in 2030, and 27% in 2050—would result in enduring environmental and health benefits; that the existing fleet of solar power plants is already offering a down-payment towards those benefits; and that there are sizable regional differences in the magnitude of the benefits. The total monetary value of the greenhouse-gas and criteria air pollution benefits of the high-penetration scenario exceeds $400 billion under central estimates, which is equivalent to roughly 3.5¢/kWh-solar. Focusing on the existing end-of- 2014 fleet of solar power projects,recent annual benefits equal more than $1.5 billion under central estimates, which is equivalent to 4.8¢/kWh-solar. Achieving the high-penetration scenario also reduces power-sector water withdrawals by 8% in 2030 and 5% in 2050, relative to the baseline scenario, while water consumption is reduced by 10% in 2030 and 16% in 2050 (see figure below). |
Notes |
A link to a journal article based on these findings published in Energy can be found here. |
Series Title |
On the Path to SunShot
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Year of Publication |
2016
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City |
Berkeley, CA
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Other Numbers |
NREL/TP-6A20-65628
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Organizations | |
Research Areas | |
File(s) | |
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