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Recent developments at CIAM

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New GAINS features to model energy efficiency improvements and fuel substitution ... products, Scrap, Coke oven coke, Sinter, Pellets, Pig iron, Direct reduced iron, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Recent developments at CIAM


1
Recent developments at CIAM
  • Markus Amann
  • International Institute for Applied Systems
    Analysis

2
Issues
  • Revision of the NEC Directive
  • Revision of the Gothenburg Protocol
  • New GAINS features to model energy efficiency
    improvements and fuel substitution
  • Marginal costs of GHG mitigation in Annex1
    countries

3
Revision of the NEC directive
  • NEC report 6 published in July 2008
  • Commission has postponed proposal on NEC until
    further notice
  • New call for tenders for NEC follow-up analysis
    published without specific dates for
    calculations
  • New PRIMES 2009 baseline will be released in June
    2009 will be used for EC4MACS interim assessment

4
Revision of the Gothenburg Protocol
  • Call for national energy projections deadline
    May 31, 2009.For appropriate format contact
    Janusz Cofala
  • Baseline projection for WGSR in September 2009
    traditional GAINS analyses will be complemented
    by quantifications of impacts by the various WGE
    Task Forces and Centres
  • Set of emission control scenario calculations for
    EB December 2009

5
EC4MACS schedule
  • Model documentations are now on the Internet
    (www.ec4macs.eu)
  • Internet consultation on methodology has been
    started deadline for comments June 15, 2009
  • Interim assessment (full model chain with recent
    PRIMES CAPRI baseline projections) August 31,
    2009
  • EC4MACS review workshop (together with Task Force
    on Integrated Assessment Modelling) October 2009

6
Marginal cost curves for GHG mitigation
  • GAINS has been used compare GHG mitigation
    efforts between Annex 1 countries,
  • all gases and sectors,
  • at detailed technical level (several 100 source
    categories, 300 mitigation measures, etc.)
  • systems approach (integrated perspective covering
    demand and supply sectors),
  • consistent with UNFCCC 2005 inventories
  • Results, input data and an interactive calculator
    freely available in the public domain
  • http//gains.iiasa.ac.at

7
New GAINS structure for domestic sectorto
facilitate assessment of energy efficiency
improvements
  • Separate treatment of Residential and Commercial
    energy use
  • Needs distinguished
  • Space heating ventilation Air conditioning
    (HVAC)
  • Water heating
  • Cooking
  • Lighting
  • Large appliances
  • Small appliances,
  • Up to 10 climate regions,
  • Flats/Single family houses,
  • Built before/after 2010,
  • For each source category
  • Up to 3 efficiency stages
  • Switch to less carbon-intensive fuels (coal to
    gas or biomass, solar),
  • District heat with CHP instead of local boilers

8
New GAINS structure for industrial sectorto
facilitate assessment of energy efficiency
improvements
  • - Iron and steel
  • Raw steel, Finished products, Scrap, Coke oven
    coke, Sinter, Pellets, Pig iron, Direct reduced
    iron, Open hearth furnace, Basic oxygen, Electric
    arc furnace, Casting, rolling finishing, Thin
    slab casting, Other
  • Non-ferrous metals
  • Aluminum (primary, secondary), Other metals
    (primary, secondary), Other
  • Non-metallic minerals
  • Cement (of which clinker), Lime, Other
  • Chemicals
  • Ammonia, Ethylene, Chlorine, Other
  • Pulp and paper
  • Pulp (from wood, from recovered paper), Paper and
    paperboard, Other
  • Other industries
  • Changes in production structure (e.g., primary
    vs. secondary metals, clinker content in cement)
    included in the baseline

9
Estimating mitigation potentialsFour steps
  • Inventory of 300 mitigation measures, with
    technical and economic features

10
Mitigation measures 300 options in each country
Structural measures
CO2 measures
N2O measures
F-gas measures
CH4 measures
11
Estimating mitigation potentialsFour steps
  • Inventory of 300 mitigation measures, with
    technical and economic features
  • For each source sector in each country
  • For 2005 Match emissions reported to UNFCCC
  • with activity data from UNFCCC, IEA and national
    statistics,
  • adjust implementation rates of mitigation
    measures.

12
Estimating mitigation potentialsFour steps
  • Inventory of 300 mitigation measures, with
    technical and economic features
  • For each source sector in each country
  • For 2005 Match emissions reported to UNFCCC
  • For 2020
  • Match baseline energy use of IEA World Energy
    Outlook 2008
  • with activity rates projected by IEA modify
    implementation rates of energy efficiency
    measures to reproduce IEA energy projection.
  • Develop baseline emission projection
  • adjust implementation rates of mitigation
    measures as reported in National Communications.

13
Estimating mitigation potentialsFour steps
  • Inventory of 300 mitigation measures, with
    technical and economic features
  • For each source sector in each country
  • For 2005 Match emissions reported to UNFCCC
  • For 2020 Match baseline energy use and develop
    baseline emission projection
  • Determine further mitigation potential
  • from implementing the best available (energy
    efficiency and C mitigation) measures that are
    not assumed in the baseline,
  • considering constraints on replacement of
    existing capital stock, structural limits, etc.

14
Energy intensity of ethylene production
15
Energy intensity of ethylene production
Efficiency frontier
16
Estimating mitigation costsThree steps
  • Determine unit costs for each mitigation option
  • Annualized investments operating costs
    savings per unit of reduced emissions
  • Reflect resource costs without transfers (no
    taxes, subsidies, profits, transaction costs,
    etc.)
  • Alternative interest rates for annualization of
    investments
  • Social (4/yr)
  • Private (20/yr)
  • For a given mitigation target
  • Determine least-cost portfolio of mitigation
    measures (i.e., including upstream effects),
    through optimization model
  • Cost curves Series of optimizations between
    baseline emissions and maximum mitigation case

17
Marginal abatement cost curveAnnex I in 2020,
20 interest rate, excl. LULUCF
7 2 -3
-10 -16
Rel. to 2005

Carbon price (/t CO2eq)
200 100 0 -100 -200
3 -2 -7
-13 -20
Rel. to 1990
Analysis not completed yet for Belarus, Croatia,
Turkey, Cyprus, Malta
18
An initial implementation
  • For largest Annex 1 countries (98 of 1990
    emissions), EU27 presented in aggregate
  • Based on activity projections of IEA World
    Energy Outlook 2008 and FAO World Agriculture
    Perspective
  • Key assumptions
  • Only currently available technologies
  • Natural turnover of capital stock, no premature
    scrapping
  • No behavioural changes
  • Domestic measures only
  • LULUCF excluded for now
  • Initial analysis compiled from publicly available
    information, received only limited review by
    national experts up to now

19
Baseline GHG emissions projectionsfor IEA
WEO2008 projection
Analysis not completed yet for Belarus, Croatia,
Turkey, Cyprus, Malta
20
Total costs for GHG mitigation, Annex 1, 2020
for different interest rates (excl. LULUCF)
21
Total cost curves for 2020 ( of GDP) (10
interest rate, excl. LULUCF)
AUS NZ CA NO US CH JP EU
RU UKR
22
Comparison of mitigation effortsfor a 16.5
reduction of total Annex 1 emissions Efficiency
vs. equity
23
On-line calculator on the Internethttp//gains.ii
asa.ac.at/MEC
24
Co-benefits on air pollutant emissionsAnnex 1,
2020
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