Abstract
AbstractAfter the Fukushima nuclear accident, nuclear policy has become uncertain in Japan, and alternatively, variable renewable (VR) energy, such as wind and photovoltaic (PV), is highlighted for addressing climate change and energy security issues. This paper attempts to assess the massive integration of VR into Japan’s long-term power-generation mix, employing the dynamic multiregional optimal power-generation mix model, which is a large-scale linear programming model including 200 million constraints. The feature of the model enables explicit consideration of the actual variability of wind and PV outputs in a 10-min temporal resolution and to analyze the impact of those variabilities on long-term expansion planning of power plants. Simulation results show that both nuclear decommission and carbon regulation policies make VR economically justified and encourage its expansion in Japan’s long-term power-generation mix. When nuclear is totally decommissioned and CO2 is mitigated by 50% from 2010 levels b...
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