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Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Building and Operating Electric Power Plants in the Upper Colorado River Basin
140
Citations
12
References
2002
Year
EngineeringEnvironmental Impact AssessmentGreenhouse Gas EmissionLawClimate PolicyAlternative Energy SolutionEarth ScienceClimate ImpactGreenhouse GasesHydropowerNew Generation CapacityClimate ChangeGlen CanyonGreenhouse Gas Emission ReductionEnergy ResourcesGreenhouse Gas EmissionsGlobal Warming EffectEmission ReductionEnergy DevelopmentSustainable EnergyGreenhouse Gas Emission MonitoringEnergy TransitionEnergy Policy
As demand for electricity increases, investments into new generation capacity from renewable and nonrenewable sources should include assessment of global (climate) change consequences not just of the operational phase of the power plants but construction effects as well. In this paper, the global warming effect (GWE) associated with construction and operation of comparable hydroelectric, wind, solar, coal, and natural gas power plants is estimated for four time periods after construction. The assessment includes greenhouse gas emissions from construction, burning of fuels, flooded biomass decay in the reservoir, loss of net ecosystem production, and land use. The results indicate that a wind farm and a hydroelectric plant in an arid zone (such as the Glen Canyon in the Upper Colorado River Basin) appear to have lower GWE than other power plants. For the Glen Canyon hydroelectric plant, the upgrade 20 yr after the beginning of operation increased power capacity by 39% but resulted in a mere 1% of the CO2 emissions from the initial construction and came with no additional emissions from the reservoir, which accounts for the majority of the GWE.
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