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Climate change impacts on planned supply–demand match in global wind and solar energy systems

Author

Listed:
  • Laibao Liu

    (Peking University
    Peking University
    ETH Zurich)

  • Gang He

    (Stony Brook University
    City University of New York)

  • Mengxi Wu

    (University of California Los Angeles
    Brown University)

  • Gang Liu

    (Peking University)

  • Haoran Zhang

    (University College London)

  • Ying Chen

    (University of Birmingham)

  • Jiashu Shen

    (Peking University
    Peking University)

  • Shuangcheng Li

    (Peking University
    Peking University)

Abstract

Climate change modulates both energy demand and wind and solar energy supply but a globally synthetic analysis of supply–demand match (SDM) is lacking. Here, we use 12 state-of-the-art climate models to assess climate change impacts on SDM, quantified by the fraction of demand met by local wind or solar supply. For energy systems with varying dependence on wind or solar supply, up to 32% or 44% of non-Antarctic land areas, respectively, are projected to experience robust SDM reductions by the end of this century under an intermediate emission scenario. Smaller and more variable supply reduces SDM at northern middle-to-high latitudes, whereas reduced heating demand alleviates or reverses SDM reductions remarkably. By contrast, despite supply increases at low latitudes, raised cooling demand reduces SDM substantially. Changes in climate extremes and climate mean make size-comparable contributions. Our results provide early warnings for energy sectors in climate change adaptation.

Suggested Citation

  • Laibao Liu & Gang He & Mengxi Wu & Gang Liu & Haoran Zhang & Ying Chen & Jiashu Shen & Shuangcheng Li, 2023. "Climate change impacts on planned supply–demand match in global wind and solar energy systems," Nature Energy, Nature, vol. 8(8), pages 870-880, August.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natene:v:8:y:2023:i:8:d:10.1038_s41560-023-01304-w
    DOI: 10.1038/s41560-023-01304-w
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