Literature DB >> 31728076

Projecting future costs to U.S. electric utility customers from power interruptions.

Peter H Larsen1, Brent Boehlert2,3, Joseph Eto1, Kristina Hamachi-LaCommare1, Jeremy Martinich4, Lisa Rennels2.   

Abstract

This analysis integrates regional models of power system reliability, output from atmosphere-ocean general circulation models, and results from the Interruption Cost Estimate (ICE) Calculator to project long-run costs to electric utility customers from power interruptions under different future severe weather and electricity system scenarios. We discuss the challenges when attempting to model long-run costs to utility customers including the use of imperfect metrics to measure severe weather. Despite these challenges, initial findings show that discounted cumulative customer costs, through the middle of the century, could range from $1.5-$3.4 trillion ($2015) without aggressive undergrounding of the power system and increased utility operations and maintenance (O&M) spending and $1.5-$2.5 trillion with aggressive undergrounding and increased spending. By the end of the century, cumulative customer costs could range from $1.9-$5.6 trillion (without aggressive undergrounding and increased spending) and $2.0-$3.6 trillion (with aggressive undergrounding and increased spending). We find that, in some scenarios, aggressive undergrounding of distribution lines and increased O&M spending is not always cost-effective. We conclude by identifying important topics for follow-on research, which have the potential to improve the cost estimates of this model.

Keywords:  Electric system reliability; Grid resilience; O2 development planning and policy; Outage cost; Power outages; Q4 energy; Q5 environmental economics; R00 general; Severe weather; Undergrounding

Year:  2018        PMID: 31728076      PMCID: PMC6855308          DOI: 10.1016/j.energy.2017.12.081

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Energy (Oxf)        ISSN: 0360-5442            Impact factor:   7.147


  1 in total

1.  Climate change. Projected increase in lightning strikes in the United States due to global warming.

Authors:  David M Romps; Jacob T Seeley; David Vollaro; John Molinari
Journal:  Science       Date:  2014-11-14       Impact factor: 47.728

  1 in total
  2 in total

1.  Climate change impacts and costs to U.S. electricity transmission and distribution infrastructure.

Authors:  Charles Fant; Brent Boehlert; Kenneth Strzepek; Peter Larsen; Alisa White; Sahil Gulati; Yue Li; Jeremy Martinich
Journal:  Energy (Oxf)       Date:  2020-03-15       Impact factor: 7.147

Review 2.  Designing resilient decentralized energy systems: The importance of modeling extreme events and long-duration power outages.

Authors:  Ryan Hanna; Jeffrey Marqusee
Journal:  iScience       Date:  2021-12-11
  2 in total

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