Home
Browse
Search
Latest additions
Policies
FAQ
About Open Access
Capturing spatial effects, technology interactions, and uncertainty in urban energy and carbon models: Retrofitting Newcastle as a case-study
Lookup NU author(s)
Dr Carlos Calderon
Author(s)
Keirstead J, Calderon C
Publication type
Article
Journal
Energy Policy
Year
2012
Volume
46
Issue
Pages
253-267
ISSN (print)
0301-4215
ISSN (electronic)
1873-6777
Full text for this publication is not currently held within this repository. Alternative links are provided below where available.
Local authorities often rely upon urban energy and carbon modelling tools to develop mitigation policies and strategies that will deliver reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. In this paper the UK example of Newcastle-upon-Tyne is used to critique current practice, noting that important features of urban energy systems are often omitted by bottom-up tools including interactions between technologies, spatial disaggregation of demand, and the ability to pursue over-arching policy goals like cost minimization. An alternative optimization-based approach is then described and applied to the Newcastle case, at the scale of both the whole city and the South Heaton district, and using Monte Carlo techniques to address policy uncertainty. The results show that this new method can help policy makers draw more robust policy conclusions, sensitive to spatial variations in energy demand and capturing the interactions between developments in the national energy system and local policy options. Further work should focus on improving our understanding of local building stocks and energy demands so as to better assess the potential of new technologies and policies.
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd
URL
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.enpol.2012.03.058
DOI
10.1016/j.enpol.2012.03.058
Actions