Luke Tonachel, Senior Analyst and Director, Clean Vehicles and Fuels Project, New York City
Producing
the electricity to power electric vehicles can generate emissions. But
those emissions levels are far lower than the pollution emitted by
conventional vehicles, and could be even lower as the electric power
sector cleans up over next few decades, according to a new report issued
recently.
The Environmental Assessment of a Full Electric Transportation Portfolio,
by the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) and the NRDC, confirms
that fueling transportation through electricity instead of petroleum can
significantly reduce emissions of greenhouse gases (GHG) and other air
pollutants that threaten our environment and health.
Electric vehicles are an essential part of a clean energy future
It's
important to consider this study in the context of climate-projection
goals that we are striving for: an 80 percent reduction in greenhouse
gas emission from 1990 levels by 2050. About 60 percent of carbon
pollution from the transportation sector comes from passenger vehicles.
If we electrify all of them with renewably generated, zero-carbon
electricity by 2050, we will address a huge part of the climate
challenge for transportation.
Our study shows that there's a
low-carbon pathway with transportation electrification. Advancing
policies that continue to clean up the grid and accelerate adoption of
electric vehicles will put us on the road to a clean energy future, and
one that meets our climate goals.
Electric vehicles and a clean grid are essential to arresting climate change
For
the EPRI-NRDC study, we considered two broad questions: 1) what are
some potential scenarios for the electricity sector of the future? and
2) what is the potential emissions impact of widespread electrification
displacing petroleum consumption in the transportation sector?
To
address the first question, we developed two potential greenhouse gas
scenarios of the future electric power sector: the "Base GHG" and "Lower
GHG" scenarios. Both show grid emissions decreasing over time, in part
because of existing and potential regulations and plausible economic
conditions. In the Lower GHG scenario, an increasing price on carbon
would further reduce carbon emissions, as it would result in faster
deployment of low-emission generation technologies.
- In the Base GHG scenario, the study estimates that, by 2050, the electricity sector could reduce annual greenhouse gas emissions by 1030 million metric tons relative to 2015 levels, a 45% reduction.
- In the Lower GHG scenario, the study estimates that, by 2050, the electricity sector could reduce annual greenhouse gas emissions by 1700 million metric tons relative to 2015 levels, a 77% reduction.
Next,
we analyzed electric sector and transportation sector emissions with and
without widespread vehicle electrification to determine the effect of
electrification of light-duty personal vehicles, some medium-duty
commercial vehicles like local delivery trucks and certain non-road
equipment, like forklifts. We found that electrification could displace
emissions from conventional petroleum-fueled vehicles for each scenario:
- In the Base GHG scenario, carbon pollution is reduced by 430 million metric tons annually in 2050--equivalent to the emissions from 80 million of today's passenger cars.
- In the Lower GHG scenario, carbon pollution is reduced by 550 million metric tons annually in 2050--equivalent to the emissions from 100 million of today's passenger cars.
We assume that plug-in electric vehicles (PEVs) are
widely adopted, such that just over half of personal vehicle miles are
powered by grid electricity by 2050. This assumption is based on a
high-penetration estimate by the National Research Council's Transitions to Alternative Vehicles and Fuels.
The
figure below shows the combined emissions for the modeled electricity
and transportation sectors. We include the Base GHG Scenario without any
transportation electrification to illustrate the effects of a grid that
is already evolving toward cleaner generation and a transportation
fleet with improving fuel economy. When the transportation sector is
electrified in the Base GHG Scenario, 2050 emissions are reduced by 48
percent from 2015 levels. In the Lower GHG Scenario, total emissions are
reduced by 70 percent from 2015 levels.
Drilling
down to the impact on cars, plugging in will result in lower carbon
pollution than a comparable conventional vehicle (CV). As shown below, a
PEV today has 54 percent lower lifetime carbon pollution today. In
2050, the reduction could be larger, as much as 59 to 71 percent
compared to a more efficient CV that achieves 48 miles per gallon in
real-world driving, depending on the electricity grid carbon intensity.
*PEV
emissions include battery manufacturing emissions and full-fuel-cycle
emissions for electricity and gasoline. Utility factor for the PEV is 87
percent, which means 13 percent of the PEV owner's mileage is covered
by a gasoline vehicle that achieves the efficiency of the corresponding
CV.
Source: EPRI, NRDC, Environmental Assessment of a Full Electric Transportation Portfolio, 2015.
Transportation electrification can improve air quality
In addition to assessing GHG impacts, the EPRI-NRDC Environmental Assessment evaluates the air quality impact
of the net pollution changes in 2030 by comparing a base,
non-electrified scenario with one that includes transportation
electrification.
We find that electrification reduces harmful
ground-level ozone, the principal component of smog, because it lowers
net emissions of nitrogen oxides (NOx) and volatile organic compounds
(VOC). A dominant factor in these reductions was the electrification of non-road equipment
such as port cranes and cargo trucks, industrial forklifts and
equipment that service aircraft when they are not flying. In most areas
of the country the ozone reductions are modest (less than 1 part per
billion), but larger ozone reductions are found in areas that need them
the most. Many urban areas that fail to meet federal air quality
standards today could see reductions of up to 3 ppb from
electrification; Los Angeles and Long Beach port areas could see
reductions as high as 4 ppb. These reductions could be important for
achieving tighter federal ozone standards, which public health and medical organizations have recommended should be tightened from 75 to 60 ppb to protect of public health.
2030 Change in Ground-Level Ozone due to Transportation Electrification
Source: EPRI, NRDC, Environmental Assessment of a Full Electric Transportation Portfolio, 2015.
Our
study also found that the reductions in NOx and VOC emissions reduced
the formation of fine unhealthy particulate matter (PM2.5) pollution.
Again, these reductions were most significant near dense coastal port
areas where non-road equipment could be electrified.
The EPRI-NRDC study uses analytical best practices
We believe that the Environmental Assessment effectively
captures the emissions impact of transportation electrification because
we employed state-of-the-art electricity grid modeling practices. We
used a comprehensive national grid simulation model--in this case, the EPRI United States Regional Economy, Greenhouse Gas, and Energy (US-REGEN)
model--to determine which power plant types (e.g. coal, natural gas,
nuclear, wind, and solar) will be dispatched to supply electricity for
charging PEVs. In some cases, it will be served by changes in the use of
existing power plants and sometimes the model will project new power
plants. A key consideration is the fact that the electricity load
attributed to PEVs will grow gradually as new PEVs enter the on-road
fleet. Electric utilities will therefore have time to plan on how they
will meet the new load. A factor in their decision-making concerning
which types of generation to deploy will be the cost of meeting existing
and potentially future environmental safeguards. In our modeling of the
evolving grid we considered this forward-looking perspective. The study
results show that marginal PEV load is met primarily by natural gas, wind and solar. Beyond 2040, our modeled scenarios also make some use of coal plants that capture and sequester their carbon pollution.
A parallel path to clean energy
The
EPRI-NRDC analysis confirms that transitioning our transportation
sector from its near sole dependence on oil to electricity can lead to
big reductions in carbon pollution along with improvements in air
quality. Meeting long-range climate targets also requires that we
continue to clean up the electric sector. We must implement the Clean
Power Plan and follow it with even stronger climate-protective policies.
We can, and should, electrify transportation and further clean up the
electric sector in parallel. Turning over the fleets of cars, trucks and
power plants to cleaner energy sources will take time and we should
resolve to make sure it happens.
http://www.theenergycollective.com/nrdcswitchboard/2273068/study-electric-vehicles-can-dramatically-reduce-carbon-pollution-transportat
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