4.6 Article

The Risks of Global Heating to Energy Systems and Energy Security

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 13, Issue 18, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su131810308

Keywords

climate emergency; climate change; hydroelectricity; glaciers; drought; sustainability; energy risk assessment; climate emergency; Canada

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Global heating is increasing risks across various sectors of society, including agriculture, the built environment, and transportation. This study uses an energy security methodology to explore the climate risks to hydroelectric power supply in western Canada, highlighting how increasing heatwaves may impact electricity supply in the region.
As recent events have shown, global heating is increasing the risk to many sectors of society, from agriculture to the built environment, to transportation. The energy security of most energy systems, regardless of their size, is also at risk from the effects of global heating: The reliable supply of power to end users can be threatened by extreme weather events affecting transformers and transmission and distribution networks. It can also be a threat to generators that are vulnerable to unpredictable supplies of water, such as thermal or hydroelectric generation facilities. In this paper, we use an energy security methodology to examine some of the possible climate risks to the supply of power from hydroelectricity produced by one of western Canada's electricity suppliers. The work is of particular interest because it shows how the increasing number of heatwaves that are affecting parts of western Canada and the Pacific Northwest could affect electricity supply in some western Canadian provinces and northern U.S. states.

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