Publication | Open Access
Cost and Emissions Implications of Coupling Wind and Solar Power
11
Citations
5
References
2012
Year
EngineeringEnergy ConversionAlternative Energy SolutionNatural Gas TurbineGas EnergyCriteria PollutantsSolar WindPower GenerationWind EnergySolar Energy UtilisationWind Power GenerationEnergy ProductionSolar Energy PolicyCoupling WindSustainable EnergyEnergy TransitionEnergy PolicyEnergy PlanningEnergy Economics
We assess the implications on long-run average energy production costs and emissions of CO2 and some criteria pollutants from coupling wind, solar and natural gas generation sources. We utilize five-minute meteorological data from a US location that has been estimated to have both high-quality wind and solar resources, to simulate production of a coupled generation system that produces a constant amount of electric energy. The natural gas turbine is utilized to provide fill-in energy for the coupled wind/solar system, and is compared to a base case where the gas turbine produces a constant power output. We assess the impacts on variability of coupled wind and solar over multiple time scales, and compare this variability with regional demand in a nearby load center, and find that coupling wind and solar does decrease variability of output. The cost analysis found that wind energy with gas back-up has a lower levelized cost of energy than using gas energy alone, resulting in production savings. Adding solar energy to the coupled system increases levelized cost of energy production; this cost is not made up by any reductions in emissions costs.
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