Search eceee proceedings

The double challenge: Limiting electricity demand growth while pushing forward electrification of energy demand – lessons from recent low-carbon roadmaps and scenarios for the EU

Panel: 1. Foundations of future energy policy

This is a peer-reviewed paper.

Authors:
Stefan Lechtenböhmer, Wuppertal Institute for Climate Environment and Energy, Germany
Sascha Samadi, Wuppertal Institute for Climate Environment Energy, Germany

Abstract

Several low-carbon energy roadmaps and scenarios have recently been published by the European Commission and the International Energy Agency (IEA) as well as by various stakeholders such as Eurelectric, ECF and Greenpeace. Discussions of these studies mainly focus on technology options available on the electricity supply side and mostly omit the significant challenges that all of the scenarios impose on the energy demand side.

A comparison of 5 decarbonisation scenarios from 4 of the most relevant recent scenario studies for the EU shows that all of them imply significant efficiency improvements in traditional appliances, usually well above levels historically observed over longer periods of time. At the same time they assume substantial electrification of transportation and heating. The scenarios suggest that both of these challenges need to be tackled successfully for decarbonising the energy system.

With shares of renewable electricity reaching at least 60% of supply in 2050 in almost all of the decarbonisation scenarios, the adaptation of demand to variable supply becomes increasingly important. This aspect of demand side management should therefore be part of any policy mix aiming for a low-carbon power system.

Based on a quantitative analysis of 5 decarbonisation scenarios and a comparison with historical evidence we derive the (implicit) new challenges posed by the current low-carbon roadmaps and develop recommendations for energy policy on the electricity demand side.

Downloads

Download this presentation as pdf: 1-086-13_Lechtenboehmer_pre.pdf

Download this paper as pdf: 1-086-13_Lechtenboehmer.pdf