Energy-water nexus in low-carbon electric power systems: A simulation-based inexact optimization model
Jie Huang, Qian Tan, Tianyuan Zhang, Shuping Wang
Abstract
Energy and water resources are closely linked in electric power systems , and the application of low-carbon technologies further affects electricity generation and water consumption in those systems. The holistic optimization of electric power systems , including generation and decarbonization processes, is necessary. Few studies have considered the uncertainty associated with the application of low-carbon technologies in electric power systems optimization from an energy-water nexus perspective. To fill such a gap, this study developed a simulation-based low-carbon energy structure optimization model to address the uncertainty in power systems with low-carbon technologies and generate electricity generation plans. Specifically, LMDI, STIRPAT and grey model were integrated to simulate the carbon emissions from the electric power systems under different socio-economic development levels. Furthermore, a copula-based chance-constrained interval mixed-integer programming model was proposed to quantify the energy-water nexus as the joint violation risk and generate risk-based low-carbon generation schemes. The model was applied to support the management of electric power systems in the Pearl River Delta of China. Results indicate that, the optimized plans could mitigate CO 2 emission by up to 37.93% over 15 years. Under all scenarios, more low-carbon power conversion facilities would be established. The application of carbon capture and storage would increase energy and water consumption by up to [0.24, 7.35] × 10 6 tce and [0.16, 1.12] × 10 8 m 3 , respectively. The optimization of the energy structure based on energy-water joint violation risk could reduce the water utilization rate and the carbon emission rate by up to 0.38 m 3 /10 4 kWh and 0.04 ton-CO 2 /10 4 kWh, respectively.