Counter-intuitive behaviour of energy system models under CO2 caps and prices

The mitigation of climate change requires a fundamental transition of the energy system. Affordability, reliability and the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions constitute central but often conflicting targets for this energy transition. Against this context, we reveal limitations and counter-intui...

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Veröffentlicht in:Energy (Oxford) 2019-03, Vol.170, p.22-30
Hauptverfasser: Weber, Juliane, Heinrichs, Heidi Ursula, Gillessen, Bastian, Schumann, Diana, Hörsch, Jonas, Brown, Tom, Witthaut, Dirk
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container_end_page 30
container_issue
container_start_page 22
container_title Energy (Oxford)
container_volume 170
creator Weber, Juliane
Heinrichs, Heidi Ursula
Gillessen, Bastian
Schumann, Diana
Hörsch, Jonas
Brown, Tom
Witthaut, Dirk
description The mitigation of climate change requires a fundamental transition of the energy system. Affordability, reliability and the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions constitute central but often conflicting targets for this energy transition. Against this context, we reveal limitations and counter-intuitive results in the model-based optimization of energy systems, which are often applied for policy advice. When system costs are minimized in the presence of a CO2 cap, efficiency gains free a part of the CO2 cap, allowing cheap technologies to replace expensive low-emission technologies. Even more striking results are observed in a setup where emissions are minimized in the presence of a budget constraint. Increasing CO2 prices can oust clean, but expensive technologies out of the system, and eventually lead to higher emissions. These effects robustly occur in models of different scope and complexity. Hence, extreme care is necessary in the application of energy system optimization models to avoid misleading policy advice. •Conflicting targets can lead to paradoxical results in optimization models.•Inappropriate emission caps spoil incentives for technological improvements.•Budget constraints can induce Giffen's paradox in energy systems.•Model transparency is needed as any constraint can dominate model outcomes.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.energy.2018.12.052
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subjects Carbon dioxide
Climate change
Climate models
CO2 cap
CO2 tax
Emissions
Energy
Energy policy
Energy system model
Energy transition
Greenhouse effect
Greenhouse gases
Mitigation
Optimization
title Counter-intuitive behaviour of energy system models under CO2 caps and prices
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