Helping Ireland transition to a renewables-led economy
Wednesday, 11 January, 2023
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Summary
Many of our most pressing global challenges – like climate change, pollution, fuel shortages and cost-of-living crises – are intrinsically linked with how we generate, distribute and use energy. To meet these challenges, Ireland must continue its progress toward becoming a renewables-led economy. UCD Energy Institute’s (opens in a new window)EMPowER project is conducting economic and technical modelling to help accelerate this transition. Through their research, the team are advising Government on the different factors that affect consumer uptake of new technologies, like heat pumps, electric vehicles and rooftop solar panels; the impact that these technologies will have on the grid; and Ireland’s ability to generate energy with higher shares of renewables. This directly informs Government strategy and targets, meaning decisions around climate action will be more effective and cost-efficient.
Research description
EMPowER is an interdisciplinary research project looking at the decarbonisation of electricity and consumer technology. The EMPowER team, led by Professor Lisa Ryan and Associate Professor Damian Flynn, uses economic and technical models to analyse specific scenarios at three levels:
Technology adoption
Professor Ryan’s team have developed computer simulations to examine the decision-making process for potential consumers of electric vehicles (EVs), heat pumps, and residential rooftop solar panels. Take EVs, for example. The models look at various factors, like the cost of the technology and different grants policies proposed by Government, to estimate consumer uptake of these vehicles, including where EVs will be distributed across the country.
Through this work, the team studied Government targets for EVs and heat pumps, and found that they are achievable subject to certain conditions around factors like fuel prices, availability of technology, and the maintenance of grant levels. Many of their findings are outlined in this (opens in a new window)public policy paper.
Distribution systems
Uptake of these three technologies will fundamentally change how we use electricity, which in turn will have significant implications for the national grid. So members of the EMPowER team, led by Professor Andrew Keane and Dr Alireza Soroudi, have created technical models to understand precisely how the grid will be affected by the electrification of heat and transport.
Power engineering
Led by Associate Professor Damian Flynn, the team are also modelling Ireland’s energy generation capability, to determine if the system will work with higher shares of renewables. They found, for instance, that it will be possible to meet the Government’s commitment to increasing the share of renewable electricity (opens in a new window)up to 80% by 2030, identifying specific requirements that will need to be met (around flexibility, energy storage, smart controls, etc.).
The project’s three strands are not independent of one another, however. The energy system is interlinked, (opens in a new window)and so is the research, with the findings in each strand informing the models in the other two. EMPowER produces comprehensive insights on how we can best achieve a low-carbon future, integrating economic, political, commercial and technical perspectives. This combination is critical for developing robust environmental policy.
Research impact
Political impact
Funded by the Department of the Environment, Climate and Communications (DECC), the EMPowER project forms part of the Climate Action Modelling Group and is designed to give robust analytical support to the policymaking process. The models developed and used by EMPowER help policymakers assess the potential impact of different policy scenarios, so that they can better understand which are the most effective and economically efficient, thereby informing Government targets, strategies and grants policies.
Initially their work was in support of the National Mitigation Plan from 2016 and in support of the Climate Action Plan since 2018. We have been very satisfied with the work carried out to date. UCD Energy Institute provides multidisciplinary capacity in the disciplines of electrical and mechanical engineering, economics, consumer behaviour and policy, with particular strengths in power systems, consumers and electricity markets
— Noel Regan, DECC
But the policy impact of this work is not limited to the one Government department. For example, Professor Ryan, Dr Joe Wheatley and Dr Mary Doorly have also provided a report for the Department of Transport on (opens in a new window)decarbonising passenger cars, analysing the market for electric vehicles, and highlighting the conditions required for meeting a target of 845,000 EVs on Ireland's roads by 2030. In addition, to extend the reach of EMPowER's findings, Dr Doorley has translated several of the team's research outputs into policy briefs that are published as part of the UCD Energy Institute's (opens in a new window)Insights Series.
Members of the EMPowER team have played crucial roles providing technical expertise in the development of various Government policies. Professor Ryan and Associated Professor Damian Flynn co-chaired a working group to develop the chapter on electricity in the (opens in a new window)Climate Action Plan 2021, and are doing so again for the 2023 update.
Professor Ryan has provided technical support and analysis on the employment impacts of carbon budgets to the Climate Change Advisory Council, an independent body advising on Ireland’s transition to a sustainable, low-carbon economy. Her research also contributed to a project on the heat sector called (opens in a new window)ReHeat, and informed the (opens in a new window)Council’s Annual Review 2022.
“Prof Ryan also contributed fully and constructively to the work of the (opens in a new window)Carbon Budget Committee through the provision of modelling and analysis of employment impacts arising from the Carbon Budgets. These inputs and expert insights were of vital importance.” — George Hussey, Manager of the Climate Change Advisory Council Secretariat
Economic impact
The research shows how Ireland can reach its ambitious decarbonisation goals in an economically efficient way. By helping the Government identify the most cost-effective measures, the EMPowER project is reducing expenditure and saving tax-payer money.
EMPowER research also demonstrates the implications of EV policy on the exchequer. With EVs estimated to make up 40% of investment in passenger cars in 2030, per-car tax revenue is (opens in a new window)forecast to fall by approximately 20%.
Ireland’s state-owned electricity companies benefit from the research as well. The findings are helping Eirgrid and ESB Networks to increase the efficiency and capability of the national grid. ESB Networks funded the EMPowER team to carry out a survey of consumer preferences on residential technologies, which provided the basis for modelling the decisions of households in simulations of future technology uptake.
Using findings from the EMPowER project, private companies in the energy space can invest more efficiently. They benefit from better insights into consumer preferences on clean energy technologies, and investment opportunities in the future power system.
Social impact
The move to a renewables-led economy will have myriad social implications, affecting everything from employment to housing to taxation. It’s crucial that this transition does not exacerbate or create new forms of poverty or inequality. Research by Professor Ryan and her colleagues is contributing to this “just transition”. Several of their models assess the justness of different policy measures, establishing whether lower-income groups would be adversely affected. They discovered that grants for EVs will yield benefits for people across all income groups, and that people driving the most kilometres (rural households) will benefit the most from policies that encourage a shift to EVs. These findings feed into the policymaking process, via the DECC Climate Action Modelling Group and other channels.
Ultimately, this research is about the environment. In the long term, it’s about ensuring we can tackle climate change, reduce pollution and its associated health impacts, minimise adverse weather events, and preserve ecosystems. Although it’s difficult to quantify the precise environmental benefits of this work, it’s clear that electrification of heat and transport powered by renewable electricity forms the key means of reducing emissions. By targeting the technical and socioeconomic economic barriers to clean energy technologies, EMPowER research is improving how quickly and efficiently we meet these goals, helping to protect the environment and all within it.
Research team
Professor Lisa Ryan, (co-lead)
Professor Damian Flynn (co-lead)
Professor Andrew Keane
Dr Mel Devine
Dr Mary Doorly
Dr Joe Wheatley
Sarah Stanley
Dr Alireza Soroudi
Dr Rinalini Lahon
Dr Tensay Meles
Funding
The project is funded by the Department of the Environment, Climate and Communications (DECC).
Selected policy documents informed by EMPowER research
(opens in a new window)Insight Series, UCD Energy Institute. Webpage includes links to a series of nine topical papers for a diverse audience, many of which include outputs from EMPowER.
Climate Action Plan 2023, Department of the Environment, Climate and Communications and the Department of the Taoiseach (forthcoming). Professor Ryan is co-chair of the electricity chapter working group, September-December 2022
Lahon, R., et al. (2020) Impact of Wide-Scale Data Centre Growth on Power System Operation with Large Share of Renewables, 2020 17th International Conference on the European Energy Market (EEM), 2020, pp. 1-6. (opens in a new window)https://doi.org/10.1109/EEM49802.2020.9221876
Rabiee, A., Keane, A., and Soroudi, A., Smart Charging of EVs to Harvest Flexibility for PVs. Boook Chapter in Electric Vehicle Integration via Smart Charging: Technology, Standards, Implementation, and Applications by Vahid Vahidinasab (Editor), Behnam Mohammadi-Ivatloo (Editor), Springer, ISBN: 9783031059087.
Stanley, S., et al. (2021) Is the transition to zero carbon power economically feasible? The case of a 70% variable renewables power system, 26th Annual Conference of the European Association of Environmental and Resource Economists (EAERE 2021), 23-25 June 2021, Berlin, Germany
Stanley, S., Ryan, L., Flynn, D. (2022) Demand response and curtailment in an isolated system with up to 80% variable renewables, 17th IAEE European Energy Conference, Athens, Greece