April 21, 2021
Feature

Preparing for Climate’s Impact on Renewables

Researchers explore options for renewables beyond hydropower in Latin America and the Caribbean

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A team of researchers explored the impacts of climate change on a variety of renewable energy sources, focusing their study on Latin America and the Caribbean, a region that already has embraced renewables. This forest is in the El Yunque national forest in Puerto Rico.

Reducing the impacts of climate change will require substantial investments in renewable energy sources. But climate change itself could affect those renewable alternatives: changing yields for biomass crops, reduced streamflow for hydropower, diminished sunlight and increasing temperatures for solar, and altered air density and wind speed patterns for wind power.

“As energy planners evaluate a wide variety of climate scenarios, there’s a risk of misrepresenting climate change’s effect on the electric power sector if impacts on all renewables aren’t accounted for,” said Chris Vernon, a senior data scientist at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE’s) Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL). “Lead author Silvia R. Santos da Silva demonstrated that planners need to account for climate impacts on renewable energy during capacity development planning to fully understand investment implications to the power sector.”

Vernon was among a team of researchers who explored the impacts of climate change on a variety of renewable energy sources, focusing their study on Latin America and the Caribbean, a region that already has embraced renewables. In 2017, renewable sources represented about 56 percent of the region’s electricity generation versus a global average of 26 percent, the study notes. Fossil fuels, the authors point out, remain the dominant source of total energy.

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In 2017, renewable sources represented about 56 percent of the electricity generation in Latin America and the Caribbean, versus a global average of 26 percent. This forest is in Ecuador. (Photo by Eva Kali | Shutterstock.com)

The renewables mix

“It’s an under-studied region since the climate impacts literature has largely focused on the USA and Europe,” said Vernon, “but of great interest due to its strong role in international climate mitigation and vulnerability to climate change.” Past studies have focused on hydropower and biomass, providing an incomplete renewables picture, which is why the study’s authors include solar and wind.

Solar and wind have experienced rapid growth in the region, from slightly less than 1 gigawatt in 2008 to about 27 gigawatts by 2017. “This growth is expected to continue due to strong policies and the strategic role of renewable energy in many Latin American and Caribbean countries’ climate goals,” said Santos da Silva, the lead author who is a graduate student in the University of Maryland Department of Atmospheric & Oceanic Science. Santos da Silva noted that Brazil plans to promote non-hydropower renewable sources, Mexico intends to focus on wind, solar and hydropower, and Argentina is particularly interested in promoting biofuels.

It was essential to study renewables beyond hydropower, said co-author Matthew Binsted, a PNNL Earth scientist.

“Hydropower is a high visibility and high priority source of renewable energy throughout much of the region we studied,” said Binsted, who is based at the Joint Global Change Research Institute in College Park, Md. “We wanted to also understand the impact of climate change on wind power production, solar power production, and biofuels. The interaction among these impacts can have implications that are greater than the individual sum of their parts.” Binsted added that Latin American and Caribbean countries are expected to rely heavily on renewables to reduce carbon dioxide emissions, while the role of carbon capture and sequestration and nuclear power in the region is less clear.

Solar and wind have experienced rapid growth in Latin America and the Caribbean, from slightly less than 1 gigawatt in 2008 to about 27 gigawatts by 2017. This forest is in Manu National Park in Peru. (Photo by RPBaiao | Shutterstock.com)

A need for investment

The study, published in February in Nature Communications, points out the need for attention to renewables’ role in Latin America and the Caribbean and the need for investment in renewables as the region attempts to meet its carbon reduction goals. Importantly, the study highlights the need for taking the potential climate change impacts on renewables into consideration during the decision-making process. This is particularly relevant for the planning of strategies to reduce carbon dioxide emissions from the power sector, which are largely reliant on renewable energy.

For hydropower alone, prior studies have shown increased production for Uruguay and the southernmost basins of Brazil and decreases in northern Brazil, Colombia, northern South America, Argentina, and southern South America.

The projections from the study offer an opportunity to plan for each country, the study authors suggest. In Argentina, for example, adding renewables such as wind power could be part of a plan to prepare for projected hydroelectricity losses. Even still, it’s possible climate change could affect wind power in the country.

In addition to Vernon, Santos da Silva, and Binsted, the study included co-authors Fernando Miralles-Wilhelm of George Mason University; and Mohamad I. Hejazi, Gokul Iyer, Thomas Wild, Pralit Patel, and Abigail Snyder, all of the Joint Global Change Research Institute, which is a DOE partnership between PNNL and the University of Maryland.

The study’s authors noted that theirs was among the first to glean insights into the potential implications of climate change on renewable energy supply and investments in Latin America and the Caribbean. They also noted that their methodology could be applied to other regions around the globe.

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About PNNL

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory draws on its distinguishing strengths in chemistry, Earth sciences, biology and data science to advance scientific knowledge and address challenges in sustainable energy and national security. Founded in 1965, PNNL is operated by Battelle for the Department of Energy’s Office of Science, which is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States. DOE’s Office of Science is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, visit https://www.energy.gov/science/. For more information on PNNL, visit PNNL's News Center. Follow us on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and Instagram.