The German load curve in 2050:
structural changes through energy
e ff i c i e n c y m e a s u r e s a n d t h e i r i m p a c t s o n
the electricity supply side
Tobias Boßmann, Rainer Elsland, Fridolin Lickert, Martin Wietschel
Fraunhofer Institute for Systems and Innovation Research ISI, Karlsruhe, Germany
eceee summer study 2013, 07th of June 2013
2
Motivation
Historical load curves
• What will the electricity load curve look like in the future, assuming uncontrolled
Asssessment
electricity consumption of the
behaviour (i.e.mean load profile of
no demand-side the 3rd
management)?
Wednesday of every month in summer time between
• How can we model the future transformation of the load curve?
1996 and 2012
• What are the impacts of transformations in the load curve on the dispatch of power
plants?
3
Agenda
1. Motivation
2. Methodology
3. Case study
4. Conclusion
5. Critical appraisal and outlook
4
Methodology
Model environment
• Socio-economic drivers • Existing power plants
• Energy carrier prices • Renewable capacities
• Technology data • bottom-up simulation model • Energy carrier prices
• available for EU27+3
• Emission factors • Weather time series
• projection until the year 2050
• Energy balances
FORECAS PowerACE
T Europe
• agent-based electricity
• Annual final energy system model • Power plant and grid
demand • hourly calculation investment and dispatch
• Energy saving potentials • available for EU27+2 + • Emissions
• Emissions MENA region • Electricity prices
• Curtailment
5
Methodology
eLOAD: energy LOad Curve ADjustment
tool
• Socio-economic drivers • Historical load curves • Conventional power
• Energy carrier prices • Appliance specific load plant capacities
• Technology data profiles • Renewable capacities
• Emission factors • Temperature time series • Energy carrier prices
• Energy balances • Weather time series
FORECAS Electricity System
eLOAD PowerACE
T demand load curve
• Annual final energy • Appliance specific load • Power plant dispatch
demand curves • Emissions
• Energy saving potentials • Electricity prices
• Emissions • Curtailment
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M e1 t h o d o l o g y
Distinction between relevant and less relevant applications according to ratio of electricity
P a r tdemand
i a l dincrease/decrease
e c o m p ocompared
s i t i otontheaoverall
p pelectricity
r o a cdemand
h ( Pin the
DA base) year
Relevant applications Less relevant
2 applications
Decomposition of the system load curve into load curves for relevant applications
INPUT: Annual electricity demand projection distinguished by country, sector, and
application,
Base year
remaining
technology (results load
from FORECAST model)
3 4
Scaling of application specific Database: Scaling of remaining load
load curves according to - Load profiles acc. to cumulated evolution
evolution between base and - Historic load curves of less relevant applications
projection year - Temperature time between base and projection
series year
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Projection year
Reaggregation of the system load curve
OUTPUT: Electricity load curve for a specific projection year and country
(serves as input for PowerACE model)
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Methodology
Load profiles
Load profiles originate from
• Internal data base
• Generation from load measurements in
the framework of field tests
• Neural Networks
• Conditional Demand Analysis
• Publicly available profiles
• Building simulation models
• Norms/standards
• Time organisation model
• Conclusion by analogy
Source: own calculations based on REMODECE
project
8
Case study
Scenario setting
Setting: Germany, 2008-2050
Scenarios:
• Reference scenario
• Decarbonisation scenario
Main drivers (based on Energy Roadmap 2050 of European Commission)
• GDP: +1.1% p.a.
• Population: -12% between 2008 and 2050
Scaling Partial decomposition
Approach (SCA) approach (PDA)
Reference
X X
Scenario (RS)
Decarbonisation
X
scenario (DS)
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Case study
Scenario setting
Demand side (=> FORECAST model)
• Reference scenario
• Business-as-usual
• Energy carrier prices further increase until 2050
• Decarbonisation scenario
• Intensified diffusion of energy saving options
• Increased use of recycling products
• Increased refurbishment rate
• Comprehensive introduction of new technologies
• Energy carrier prices: further increase until 2030, then decline
Hourly load (=> eLOAD)
• No demand-side management
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Case study
Results of FORECAST model
Germany
+178%
-20% ∆a,abs [TWh] |∆a,abs| /∑| ∆|a,abs| /dtotal,
-9%
Reference
∆a,abs| 2050
+1% E-Mobility +31 15% 5%
∑ = +2%
compared to 2008
Heat pumps +14 8% 3%
-5%
Storage -8 4% 1%
heater
Decarbonisation
+402% ∆a,abs [TWh] |∆a,abs| /∑| ∆|a,abs| /dtotal,
-20% ∆a,abs| 2050
-23%
E-Mobility +69 22% 12%
∑ = -1% -8%
compared to 2008 Heat pumps +41 14% 8%
-14% Storage -12 4% 2%
heater
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Case study
Results from eLOAD
RS-SCA RS-PDA DS-PDA
Maximum load 90 GW 97 GW 103 GW
Minimum load 39 GW 35 GW 34 GW
Capacity factor 72% 66% 62%
Ramp rate factor 0.58% 0.70% 0.78%
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Case study
Results from eLOAD
Variation of daily load distribution
RS-SCA vs. RS-PDA RS-PDA vs. DS-PDA
(impacts from new approach) (impacts from scenario
settings)
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Case study
Scenario setting
Supply side (=> PowerACE model)
• No distinction between the two scenarios => ceteris paribus
• Total installed capacity: 255 GW
• Whereof 90 GW conventional
• Whereof 165 GW RES
• Total RES generation: 400 TWh
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Case study
Results from PowerACE-Europe
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Case study
Results from PowerACE-Europe
RS-SCA
Total electricity demand 564 TWh
Lignite CCS 74 TWh / 5480 h
Hard coal CCS 80 TWh / 4520 h
Gas CCS 19 TWh / 2600 h
Gas without CCS 9 TWh / 510 h
Oil 12 TWh / 510 h
Import -18 TWh
RES 403 TWh / 2440 h
Total input into pump storage 16 TWh
Hrs. with neg. residual load 1670
Share of curtailed RES 3%
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Conclusion
• Efficiency measures can limit further growth of electricity demand
• Savings are erased electrification of transport and heat generation sector
• Applying the PDA, the future load curve will experience a thorough deformation
• a rise in peak demand as well as peak load hours and an increase in volatility
(compared to today’s shape and the estimation via the scaling approach)
• if no additional strategies are undertaken (e.g. demand response, grid
extension, storage capacities) use of peak power plants and curtailment of RES
will increase
• electric vehicles and heat pumps are particularly suitable for load shifting
Outlook
• Integration of demand-side management
• Consideration of impacts of efficiency measures on load profile
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Thank you for your attention!