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Spatially explicit life cycle assessments reveal hotspots of environmental impacts from renewable electricity generation

Anna Schomberg, Stefan Bringezu, Martina Flörke, Hannes Biederbick

2022Communications Earth & Environment26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Renewable energy generation has great potential to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, however, it may exacerbate other environmental impacts, such as water scarcity, elsewhere in the supply chain. Here, we reveal a wide range of global environmental impacts of concentrated solar power, run-of-river hydropower, and biomass burning compared to classical coal-fired power: Spatially explicit life cycle impact assessment is used to evaluate their supply chains with respect to demand for energy, land, material, and water, greenhouse gas emissions, and impacts on human health and ecosystem quality with a focus on mining. Hotspot analyses in terms of location and type of impact show that there is no clear preference for any of the technologies, mainly because water consumption is often critical on-site. The examined concentrated solar power plant is the least suitable for a sustainable energy transition: Its spatial hotspots are spreading the furthest globally and may exceed those of coal combustion in number and severity. The presented methodology is the basis to mitigate such environmental hotspots.

Topics & Concepts

Greenhouse gasEnvironmental scienceLife-cycle assessmentHydropowerRenewable energyElectricity generationNatural resource economicsCoalEnvironmental impact assessmentEnvironmental resource managementEnvironmental engineeringEnvironmental protectionEcologyProduction (economics)Waste managementEconomicsPower (physics)EngineeringQuantum mechanicsMacroeconomicsPhysicsBiologyEnergy and Environment ImpactsEnvironmental Impact and SustainabilityPhotovoltaic Systems and Sustainability
Spatially explicit life cycle assessments reveal hotspots of environmental impacts from renewable electricity generation | Litcius