Water use of the UK thermal electricity generation fleet by 2050: Part 2 quantifying the problem

Daniel Murrant, Andrew Quinn, Lee Chapman, Chris Heaton

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

14 Citations (Scopus)
199 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

The increasing demand for energy is expected to predominantly be met from a global expansion of water intensive thermal electricity generation. Most countries will in future have less freshwater available when inevitability the cost of thermal generation depends on water availability. A country's future energy costs will directly affect its future global competiveness. Many studies have identified that the solution to the UK's future energy policy's mismatch between thermal generation and freshwater availability is for the UK to make greater use of its seawater resource. The fact the UK with a long learning curve of successful nuclear coastal generation is not progressing coastal generation more enthusiastically raises fundamental policy questions. This paper considers the issues involved. A methodology is developed to assess how the UK's electricity generation portfolio will change in terms of the technologies adopted, and their cost, as access to seawater is varied under Q70 and Q95 freshwater conditions. It was found the emphasis UK energy policy gives to the competing demands of low cost electricity generation and environmental protection will have significant impacts on the cost and make-up of the UK's future electricity generation portfolio.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)859-874
JournalEnergy Policy
Volume108
Early online date14 Apr 2017
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2017

Keywords

  • Water-energy nexus
  • UK energy policy
  • Water resource management
  • Water abstraction reform
  • Climate change
  • Power station cooling

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