Meteorological conditions leading to extreme low variable renewable energy production and extreme high energy shortfall

Publication date

2019-05-17

Authors

van der Wiel, Karin
Stoop, Laurens P.ISNI 0000000492798389
Zuijlen, BasISNI 0000000492611350
Blackport, Russell
van den Broek, MachteldORCID 0000-0003-1028-1742ISNI 0000000396870440
Selten, Frank

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

To mitigate climate change a renewable energy transition is needed. Existing power systems will need to be redesigned to balance variable renewable energy production with variable energy demand. We investigate the meteorological sensitivity of a highly-renewable European energy system using large ensemble simulations from two global climate models. Based on 32000 years of simulated weather conditions, daily wind and solar energy yields, and energy demand are calculated. From this data, 1-, 7- and 14-days events of extreme low renewable energy production and extreme high energy shortfall are selected. Energy shortfall is defined as the residual load, i.e. demand minus renewable production. 1-day low energy production days are characterised by large-scale high pressure systems over central Europe, with lower than normal wind speeds. These events typically occur in winter when solar energy is limited due to short day lengths. Situations of atmospheric blocking lead to long lasting periods of low energy production, such 7- and 14-days low production events peak late summer. High energy shortfall events occur due to comparable high pressure systems though now combined with below normal temperatures, driving up energy demand. In contrast to the low energy production events, 1-, 7- and 14-days high shortfall events all occur mid-winter, locked to the coldest months of the year. A spatial redistribution of wind turbines and solar panels cannot prevent these high-impact events, options to import renewable energy from remote locations during these events are limited. Projected changes due to climate change are substantially smaller than interannual variability. Future power systems with large penetration of variable renewable energy must be designed with these events in mind.

Keywords

Variable renewable energy, Energy transition, Energy security, Extreme weather, Energy meteorology, Climate change, Climate impacts, SDG 7 - Affordable and Clean Energy, SDG 13 - Climate Action

Citation

van der Wiel, K, Stoop, L P, van Zuijlen, B R H, Blackport, R, van den Broek, M A & Selten, F 2019, 'Meteorological conditions leading to extreme low variable renewable energy production and extreme high energy shortfall', Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, vol. 111, pp. 261-275. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rser.2019.04.065