A Methodology for Constructing Marginal Abatement Cost Curves for Climate Action in Cities
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Review of Marginal Abatement Cost Curves
2.1. Early Conservation Supply Curves
2.2. Marginal Abatement Cost (MAC) Curves for Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Emissions
2.3. Emerging MAC Curves for Cities
2.4. An Evaluation of MAC Curves
2.4.1. Merits and Methodological Improvements
2.4.2. Shortcomings and Limitations of Application
2.4.3. MAC Curves Influence on Policy
3. Results
4. Discussion
5. Methodology for Constructing a Bottom-Up MAC Curve
- CEMM = Cost effectiveness of the mitigation measure over the lifetime of the measure in 2012$ per ton of CO2 reduction, $/tCO2;
- NPCINC,MM = Net present cost of the incremental costs and benefits of the mitigation measure over the lifetime of the measure, $; and
- EMM = GHG emissions avoided during the lifetime of the measure, tCO2.
- CINC,MM (t) = Annual incremental costs of the operations of the mitigation measure, at time t, over its lifetime, $;
- SINC,MM (t) = Annual savings, evaluated as financial savings due to reduced energy consumption of the mitigation measure, over its lifetime, $;
- i = discount rate, %;
- L = Lifetime of mitigation measure (estimated as the design life of the technology), in years.
- ECBE,REF = Annual energy consumption of baseline energy by the reference technology, in GJ;
- ECBE,MM = Annual energy consumption of the baseline energy of the mitigation measure, in GJ;
- ECAE,MM = Annual energy consumption of alternate energy (due to fuel switching) of the mitigation measure, in GJ;
- pBE = Unit price of energy (for baseline energy), in $/GJ (constant in the analysis); and
- pAE = Unit price of energy (for alternate energy), in $/GJ (constant in the analysis).
- AGHG,MM = GHG abatement potential achieved by the mitigation measure which is implemented by the “eligible” infrastructure stock in the target year (tCO2); (“eligible” stock is the amount of stock for which the mitigation measure is applicable and does not include the total infrastructure stock);
- nTARGET = Number of years to target year of the climate commitment for emission reductions, and represents the analysis period up to the target year. For example, if the year 2012 is the beginning of the analysis, therefore n = 8 for 2020, and n = 38 for 2050.
- UMM = Units of the mitigation measure in the infrastructure stock (e.g., one appliance per household, 1 passenger vehicle per 20,000 VKT)
- SMM = Infrastructure stock to which the mitigation measure is eligible (i.e., applicable to), measured in number of households for residential buildings and residential waste sectors, GFA (m2) for commercial buildings and commercial waste sectors, VKT (km) in passenger vehicles, buses and freight transportation, and kWh for electricity consumption. Note: existing technology penetration is subtracted from the eligible stock.
- Reference technology is selected for comparison, and in some cases mitigation measures do not replace a technology, but rather are additional, in which case, a reference technology does not apply.
- Industry costs are used for costing technologies; where cost estimates that are city-specific when and where available are used, but country and global costing data are used in the event of their absence at the city scale.
- Average capital cost of technology is used.
- Existing technology penetration, or policy adoption is assumed from existing city programs, if available.
- Abatement is assumed to follow the status quo, i.e., existing uptake of the technology.
- Planned abatement takes city program projections into account.
- Savings only include financial savings from reduced fuel or energy consumption, and is the only benefit considered.
- Co-benefits are not considered in the analysis.
- Some policy options are assumed to have no cost, but result in emission savings.
- Information is obtained from publicly available documents where possible.
- Capital cost of mitigation measures, and reference technologies are converted to 2012$.
- Operations and maintenance (O&M) costs.
- Discount rate (assumed 5%).
- Energy source.
- Emission factors for energy sources.
- Emissions intensity of the power supply.
- Electricity and fuel prices.
- Stock of residential, commercial, transportation and waste in target years based on an emissions forecasting model.
- Lifetime of technologies for reference technology and mitigation measure, and reconciled where different.
6. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
GHG | Greenhouse gas |
MAC | Marginal Abatement Cost |
METRO | Managing Emission Targets and Reduction Options |
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Ibrahim, N.; Kennedy, C. A Methodology for Constructing Marginal Abatement Cost Curves for Climate Action in Cities. Energies 2016, 9, 227. https://doi.org/10.3390/en9040227
Ibrahim N, Kennedy C. A Methodology for Constructing Marginal Abatement Cost Curves for Climate Action in Cities. Energies. 2016; 9(4):227. https://doi.org/10.3390/en9040227
Chicago/Turabian StyleIbrahim, Nadine, and Christopher Kennedy. 2016. "A Methodology for Constructing Marginal Abatement Cost Curves for Climate Action in Cities" Energies 9, no. 4: 227. https://doi.org/10.3390/en9040227
APA StyleIbrahim, N., & Kennedy, C. (2016). A Methodology for Constructing Marginal Abatement Cost Curves for Climate Action in Cities. Energies, 9(4), 227. https://doi.org/10.3390/en9040227