| Literature DB >> 33727547 |
Ryna Yiyun Cui1, Nathan Hultman2, Diyang Cui2,3, Haewon McJeon2,4, Sha Yu2,4, Morgan R Edwards2,5, Arijit Sen2, Kaihui Song2,3, Christina Bowman2, Leon Clarke2, Junjie Kang6, Jiehong Lou2, Fuqiang Yang6, Jiahai Yuan7, Weirong Zhang7, Mengye Zhu2,8.
Abstract
More than half of current coal power capacity is in China. A key strategy for meeting China's 2060 carbon neutrality goal and the global 1.5 °C climate goal is to rapidly shift away from unabated coal use. Here we detail how to structure a high-ambition coal phaseout in China while balancing multiple national needs. We evaluate the 1037 currently operating coal plants based on comprehensive technical, economic and environmental criteria and develop a metric for prioritizing plants for early retirement. We find that 18% of plants consistently score poorly across all three criteria and are thus low-hanging fruits for rapid retirement. We develop plant-by-plant phaseout strategies for each province by combining our retirement algorithm with an integrated assessment model. With rapid retirement of the low-hanging fruits, other existing plants can operate with a 20- or 30-year minimum lifetime and gradually reduced utilization to achieve the 1.5 °C or well-below 2 °C climate goals, respectively, with complete phaseout by 2045 and 2055.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33727547 PMCID: PMC7966364 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-21786-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919