Intertemporal
Cumulative Radiative Forcing Effects
of Photovoltaic Deployments
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Abstract
Current policies
accelerating photovoltaics (PV) deployments are
motivated by environmental goals, including reducing greenhouse gas
(GHG) emissions by displacing electricity generated from fossil-fuels.
Existing practice assesses environmental benefits on a net life-cycle
basis, where displaced GHG emissions offset those generated during
PV production. However, this approach does not consider that the environmental
costs of GHG release during production are incurred early, while environmental
benefits accrue later. Thus, where policy targets suggest meeting
GHG reduction goals established by a certain date, rapid PV deployment
may have counterintuitive, albeit temporary, undesired consequences.
On a cumulative radiative forcing (CRF) basis, the environmental improvements
attributable to PV might be realized much later than is currently
understood, particularly when PV manufacturing utilizes GHG-intensive
energy sources (e.g., coal), but deployment occurs in areas with less
GHG-intensive electricity sources (e.g., hydroelectric). This paper
details a dynamic CRF model to examine the intertemporal warming impacts
of PV deployments in California and Wyoming. CRF payback times are
longer than GHG payback times by 6β12 years in California and
6β11 years in Wyoming depending on the PV technology mix and
deployment strategy. For the same PV capacity being deployed, early
installations yield greater CRF benefits (calculated over 10 and 25
years) than installations occurring later in time. Further, CRF benefits
are maximized when PV technologies with the lowest manufacturing GHG
footprint (cadmium telluride) are deployed in locations with the most
GHG-intensive grids (i.e., Wyoming)