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Emission pathways towards a low-carbon energy system for Europe: a model-based analysis of decarbonization scenarios

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Bibliographic Details
Authors and Corporations: Hainsch, Karlo (Author), Burandt, Thorsten (Author), Kemfert, Claudia (Author), Löffler, Konstantin (Author), Oei, Pao-Yu (Author), Hirschhausen, Christian R. von (Author)
Other Authors: Burandt, Thorsten [Author] • Kemfert, Claudia 1968- [Author] • Löffler, Konstantin [Author] • Oei, Pao-Yu 1986- [Author] • Hirschhausen, Christian R. von 1964- [Author]
Type of Resource: E-Book
Language: English
published:
Series: Deutsches Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung: Discussion papers ; 1745
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Source: Verbunddaten SWB
Lizenzfreie Online-Ressourcen
Description
Summary: The aim of this paper is to showcase different decarbonization pathways for Germany and Europe with varying Carbon dioxide (CO2) constraints until 2050. The Global Energy System Model (GENeSYS-MOD) framework, a linear mathematical optimization model, is used to compute low-carbon scenarios for Europe as a whole, as well as for 17 European countries or regions. The sectors power, low- and high-temperature heating, and passenger and freight transportation are included, with the model endogenously constructing capacities in each period. Emission constraints differ between different scenarios and are either optimized endogenously by the model, or distributed on a per-capita basis, GDP-dependent, or based on current emissions. The results show a rapid phase-in of renewable energies, if a carbon budget in line with established climate targets is chosen. In the 2° pathway, the power and low-temperature heat sectors are mostly decarbonized by 2035, with the other sectors following. Wind power is the most important energy source in Europe by 2050, followed by solar energy and hydro power. The heating sector is dominated by biogas and heat pumps, while electric vehicles emerge in the transportation sector in the later periods. Differences in renewable potentials lead to different developments in the regions, e.g., converting Germany from a net exporter of electricity into an importing country by 2050. In the 1.5° pathway, not all calculations are feasible, showcasing that especially countries like Poland or the Balkan region that heavily rely on fossil fuels will face difficulties transitioning away from their current generation capacities. It can, however, be shown that the achievement of the 2° target can be met with low additonal costs compared to the business as usual case, while reducing total emissions by more than 30%.
Physical Description: 1 Online-Ressource (circa 37 Seiten); Illustrationen