September 30, 2013
Conference Paper

POTENTIAL DROUGHT IMPACTS ON ELECTRICITY GENERATION IN TEXAS

Abstract

Many power plants in the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) region require a large amount of water for system cooling. To improve the understanding of potential risks of electricity generation curtailment due to drought, an assessment of water availability and its potential impacts on generation during drought was performed. For this impact analysis, we identified three drought scenarios based on historical drought records and projected climate data from the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory global climate model, for greenhouse gas emission scenario A2 defined by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change . The three drought scenarios are (1) 2011 drought conditions (the worst drought in history), with the current level of water use; (2) a single-year drought (2022) projected for the period of 2020-2030, with the assumed projected water use level for 2030; and (3) a multiple-year drought constructed with climate data for 1950-1957 and water demand projected for 2030. The projected drought scenario in 2022 and the historical droughts in 2011 and 1950-1957 represent two different precipitation patterns in the Texas-Gulf river basin. The hydrologic model constructed for the Texas-Gulf river basin covers most of the ERCOT region. The model incorporates climate and water use data that correspond to three drought scenarios, respectively, to estimate evapotranspiration, water yield from watersheds, stream flow and water storage in reservoirs. Using criteria based on observed (

Revised: June 7, 2018 | Published: September 30, 2013

Citation

Yan Y., Y.K. Demissie, M.S. Wigmosta, V.C. Tidwell, C.W. King, and M.A. Cook. 2013. POTENTIAL DROUGHT IMPACTS ON ELECTRICITY GENERATION IN TEXAS. In ASME 2013 Power Conference, July 29 - August 1, 2013, Boston, Massachusetts, V002T10A008; Paper No. POWER2013-98318. New York, New York:ASME. PNNL-SA-95847. doi:10.1115/POWER2013-98318