skip to main content
OSTI.GOV title logo U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

Title: How structural differences influence cross-model consistency: An electric sector case study

Journal Article · · Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews

Multiple models are often employed to examine a range of possible outcomes for one or more scenarios, yielding insights into causal relationships and their uncertainties. Electric sector capacity expansion scenarios are commonly explored in such efforts due to the electric sector's overall economic importance, but multi-model results typically span a broad solution space despite efforts to harmonize input assumptions, making decision implications difficult to discern. This study investigates the relationship between efforts to harmonize input assumptions across multiple models and the resulting consistency of model outputs under different electric sector scenarios. We compare cross-model consistency between two electric sector capacity expansion models (GCAM-USA and ReEDS) for six electric sector scenarios with alternate assumptions about fossil fuel prices, technology innovation, and economy-wide transitions under four harmonization configurations that vary model representations of electricity demand, fuel prices, renewable resources, and capacity retirements. These comparisons reveal that cross-model consistency can vary across scenarios under a given harmonization configuration, suggesting that harmonization efforts must often be scenario-specific to achieve comparable cross-model consistency. Harmonization does not always improve consistency due to complex interactions between input assumptions, harmonized features, and unharmonized features. However, thorough harmonization can reduce uncertainty bounds and reveal insights into what drives cross-model consistency between two or more models. This work provides researchers and decision makers with a framework to carefully consider tradeoffs between effort and impact of harmonization efforts within multi-model analysis activities.

Research Organization:
National Renewable Energy Lab. (NREL), Golden, CO (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE Office of Science (SC), Multi-Sector Dynamics, Earth and Environmental System Modeling Program; USDOE
Grant/Contract Number:
AC36-08GO28308
OSTI ID:
1774884
Alternate ID(s):
OSTI ID: 1788103
Report Number(s):
NREL/JA-5C00-75440; MainId:6582; UUID:90d16cdc-5306-ea11-9c2a-ac162d87dfe5; MainAdminID:21203
Journal Information:
Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, Vol. 144; ISSN 1364-0321
Publisher:
ElsevierCopyright Statement
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

References (21)

Preface and introduction to EMF 27 journal March 2014
Integrated human-earth system modeling—state of the science and future directions journal June 2018
Long-Term Uranium Supply Estimates journal June 2008
Regional energy system variation in global models: Results from the Asian Modeling Exercise scenarios journal December 2012
Overview of EMF 22 U.S. transition scenarios journal December 2009
Integrating short term variations of the power system into integrated energy system models: A methodological review journal September 2017
Introduction to EMF 24 journal September 2014
Key findings from the core North American scenarios in the EMF34 intermodel comparison journal September 2020
Implications of water constraints on electricity capacity expansion in the United States journal February 2019
Decomposing supply-side and demand-side impacts of climate change on the US electricity system through 2050 journal January 2020
Energy systems modeling for twenty-first century energy challenges journal May 2014
Measuring progress from nationally determined contributions to mid-century strategies journal November 2017
A review of modelling tools for energy and electricity systems with large shares of variable renewables journal November 2018
System integration of wind and solar power in integrated assessment models: A cross-model evaluation of new approaches journal May 2017
Climate-Water Adaptation for Future US Electricity Infrastructure journal November 2019
An Assessment of World Hydrocarbon Resources journal November 1997
Improving consistency among models of overlapping scope in multi-sector studies: The case of electricity capacity expansion scenarios journal December 2019
Modelling energy technologies in a competitive market journal April 1993
U.S. energy sector impacts of technology innovation, fuel price, and electric sector CO2 policy: Results from the EMF 32 model intercomparison study journal June 2018
The EMF 32 study on technology and climate policy strategies for greenhouse gas reductions in the U.S. electric power sector: An overview journal June 2018
The role of input assumptions and model structures in projections of variable renewable energy: A multi-model perspective of the U.S. electricity system journal October 2018