Litcius/Paper detail

Carbon-Free Energy: How Much, How Soon?

Ric O’Connell, Amol Phadke, Michael O’Boyle, C. Clack, Paul Denholm, Bernhard Ernst

2021IEEE Power and Energy Magazine17 citationsDOI

Abstract

The scientific consensus is that carbon emissions need to reach net zero by 2050 to stabilize a global temperature rise below 2 °C. Many studies have focused on reaching net zero in the power sector by 2050 and have posited the need for clean firm power sources. Resources such as nuclear, fossil generation with carbon capture and sequestration, or other technologies would be needed to complement variable wind and solar generation.

Topics & Concepts

Carbon sequestrationNuclear powerNatural resource economicsWind powerZero emissionElectricity generationFossil fuelRenewable energyEnvironmental scienceCarbon fibersVariable (mathematics)Global warmingClimate changePower (physics)EconomicsEngineeringWaste managementPhysicsChemistryComputer scienceCarbon dioxideEcologyMathematical analysisAlgorithmQuantum mechanicsNuclear physicsOrganic chemistryElectrical engineeringComposite numberBiologyMathematicsGlobal Energy and Sustainability ResearchIntegrated Energy Systems Optimization
Carbon-Free Energy: How Much, How Soon? | Litcius