Decarbonization and technology cost drivers: considerations for potential future thermoelectric water use in the power sector

The power sector is currently undergoing significant changes, driven by a combination of factors, including decarbonization and technology innovation. This study aims to assess implications of these drivers on U.S. power sector technology futures and the associated water and environmental implicatio...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Stuart Cohen, Raquel Valdez, Vincent Tidwell, Saroj Khanal, Thushara Gunda
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IOP Publishing 2025-01-01
Series:Environmental Research: Energy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1088/2753-3751/ada15d
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1841553408034603008
author Stuart Cohen
Raquel Valdez
Vincent Tidwell
Saroj Khanal
Thushara Gunda
author_facet Stuart Cohen
Raquel Valdez
Vincent Tidwell
Saroj Khanal
Thushara Gunda
author_sort Stuart Cohen
collection DOAJ
description The power sector is currently undergoing significant changes, driven by a combination of factors, including decarbonization and technology innovation. This study aims to assess implications of these drivers on U.S. power sector technology futures and the associated water and environmental implications for cooling thermoelectric power plants. Specifically, we evaluate four decarbonization scenarios for the contiguous United States that vary in assumptions concerning demand growth and technology costs, with technology costs driving alternative outcomes that prioritize either technologies that require low amounts of water (such as wind, solar, and battery) or high amounts of water (such as nuclear and carbon capture and storage). These scenarios are executed in a power sector capacity expansion model and compared to two reference scenarios that assume status quo with policy and cost drivers. Our analysis indicates that future U.S. thermoelectric water withdrawals could decrease by 25%–60%, but water consumption could more than triple in some scenarios. These changes are driven by a combination of retirement of some power facilities, shifts in cooling technologies, and new technology deployment. The water use patterns vary across the United States, with the eastern regions demonstrating a lot more variability in water consumption across scenarios than western regions. However, local concerns can influence these possible investments, since increased water consumption can exacerbate water scarcity, leading to conflicts among competing users and affecting regional social, environmental, and economic dynamics. Future work should consider possible costs associated with alternate water sources, as well as improve the representation of water constraints within simulations. Inclusion of extreme events and alternate modeling platforms (e.g. production cost modeling and resource adequacy) may also be warranted to further stress test the robustness of these possible technology futures. Such assessments will be critical for ensuring decarbonization and other infrastructure-oriented investments lead to a reliable and resilient power grid.
format Article
id doaj-art-c19553fb238043758cb5f21274cd72b0
institution Kabale University
issn 2753-3751
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher IOP Publishing
record_format Article
series Environmental Research: Energy
spelling doaj-art-c19553fb238043758cb5f21274cd72b02025-01-09T09:04:32ZengIOP PublishingEnvironmental Research: Energy2753-37512025-01-012101500210.1088/2753-3751/ada15dDecarbonization and technology cost drivers: considerations for potential future thermoelectric water use in the power sectorStuart Cohen0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8389-6516Raquel Valdez1https://orcid.org/0009-0003-4840-0847Vincent Tidwell2https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4954-897XSaroj Khanal3https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0119-3188Thushara Gunda4https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1945-4064National Renewable Energy Laboratory , Golden, CO, United States of AmericaSandia National Laboratories , Albuquerque, NM, United States of AmericaPacific Northwest National Laboratory , Richland, WA, United States of AmericaJohns Hopkins University , Baltimore, MD, United States of AmericaSandia National Laboratories , Albuquerque, NM, United States of AmericaThe power sector is currently undergoing significant changes, driven by a combination of factors, including decarbonization and technology innovation. This study aims to assess implications of these drivers on U.S. power sector technology futures and the associated water and environmental implications for cooling thermoelectric power plants. Specifically, we evaluate four decarbonization scenarios for the contiguous United States that vary in assumptions concerning demand growth and technology costs, with technology costs driving alternative outcomes that prioritize either technologies that require low amounts of water (such as wind, solar, and battery) or high amounts of water (such as nuclear and carbon capture and storage). These scenarios are executed in a power sector capacity expansion model and compared to two reference scenarios that assume status quo with policy and cost drivers. Our analysis indicates that future U.S. thermoelectric water withdrawals could decrease by 25%–60%, but water consumption could more than triple in some scenarios. These changes are driven by a combination of retirement of some power facilities, shifts in cooling technologies, and new technology deployment. The water use patterns vary across the United States, with the eastern regions demonstrating a lot more variability in water consumption across scenarios than western regions. However, local concerns can influence these possible investments, since increased water consumption can exacerbate water scarcity, leading to conflicts among competing users and affecting regional social, environmental, and economic dynamics. Future work should consider possible costs associated with alternate water sources, as well as improve the representation of water constraints within simulations. Inclusion of extreme events and alternate modeling platforms (e.g. production cost modeling and resource adequacy) may also be warranted to further stress test the robustness of these possible technology futures. Such assessments will be critical for ensuring decarbonization and other infrastructure-oriented investments lead to a reliable and resilient power grid.https://doi.org/10.1088/2753-3751/ada15dthermoelectricwater consumptionwater withdrawaldecarbonizationcapacity expansion modelinggrid scenarios
spellingShingle Stuart Cohen
Raquel Valdez
Vincent Tidwell
Saroj Khanal
Thushara Gunda
Decarbonization and technology cost drivers: considerations for potential future thermoelectric water use in the power sector
Environmental Research: Energy
thermoelectric
water consumption
water withdrawal
decarbonization
capacity expansion modeling
grid scenarios
title Decarbonization and technology cost drivers: considerations for potential future thermoelectric water use in the power sector
title_full Decarbonization and technology cost drivers: considerations for potential future thermoelectric water use in the power sector
title_fullStr Decarbonization and technology cost drivers: considerations for potential future thermoelectric water use in the power sector
title_full_unstemmed Decarbonization and technology cost drivers: considerations for potential future thermoelectric water use in the power sector
title_short Decarbonization and technology cost drivers: considerations for potential future thermoelectric water use in the power sector
title_sort decarbonization and technology cost drivers considerations for potential future thermoelectric water use in the power sector
topic thermoelectric
water consumption
water withdrawal
decarbonization
capacity expansion modeling
grid scenarios
url https://doi.org/10.1088/2753-3751/ada15d
work_keys_str_mv AT stuartcohen decarbonizationandtechnologycostdriversconsiderationsforpotentialfuturethermoelectricwateruseinthepowersector
AT raquelvaldez decarbonizationandtechnologycostdriversconsiderationsforpotentialfuturethermoelectricwateruseinthepowersector
AT vincenttidwell decarbonizationandtechnologycostdriversconsiderationsforpotentialfuturethermoelectricwateruseinthepowersector
AT sarojkhanal decarbonizationandtechnologycostdriversconsiderationsforpotentialfuturethermoelectricwateruseinthepowersector
AT thusharagunda decarbonizationandtechnologycostdriversconsiderationsforpotentialfuturethermoelectricwateruseinthepowersector