Power-to-gas: Decarbonization of the European electricity system with synthetic methane

HÜ Yilmaz, SO Kimbrough, C van Dinther, D Keles - Applied energy, 2022 - Elsevier
Applied energy, 2022Elsevier
The general conclusion of climate change studies is the necessity of eliminating net CO 2
emissions in general and from the electric power systems in particular by 2050. The share of
renewable energy is increasing worldwide, but due to the intermittent nature of wind and
solar power, a lack of system flexibility is already hampering the further integration of
renewable energy in some countries. In this study, we analyze if and how combinations of
carbon pricing and power-to-gas (PtG) generation in the form of green power-to-hydrogen …
The general conclusion of climate change studies is the necessity of eliminating net CO 2 emissions in general and from the electric power systems in particular by 2050. The share of renewable energy is increasing worldwide, but due to the intermittent nature of wind and solar power, a lack of system flexibility is already hampering the further integration of renewable energy in some countries. In this study, we analyze if and how combinations of carbon pricing and power-to-gas (PtG) generation in the form of green power-to-hydrogen followed by methanation (which we refer to as PtG throughout) using captured CO 2 emissions can provide transitions to deep decarbonization of energy systems. To this end, we focus on the economics of deep decarbonization of the European electricity system with the help of an energy system model. In different scenario analyses, we find that a CO 2 price of 160€/t (by 2050) is on its own not sufficient to decarbonize the electricity sector, but that a CO 2 price path of 125 (by 2040) up to 160€/t (by 2050), combined with PtG technologies, can lead to an economically feasible decarbonization of the European electricity system by 2050. These results are robust to higher than anticipated PtG costs.
Elsevier
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