4.7 Article

Life cycle analysis of external costs of a parabolic trough Concentrated Solar Power plant

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
Volume 195, Issue -, Pages 32-43

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2018.05.187

Keywords

Life cycle analysis; Concentrated Solar Power; Greenhouse gas; Human health; Damage cost

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A number of developing countries have undertaken measures to diversify into renewable electricity generation. Concentrated Solar Power (CSP) is one of the technologies, though despite the high capital costs have numerous technological capabilities. CSP however is a new technology in many developing countries, where the external costs have not been fully understood. Thus far, South Africa has not conducted any detailed externalities assessments for renewable electricity sources. The presented research aims to evaluate the external cost associated with a solar CSP plant using life cycle analysis. The analysis uses a parabolic trough CSP plant with 100 MW capacity located in the Northern Cape region in South Africa. The analysis evaluated external impacts and costs for climate change, human health, loss of biodiversity, local effects on crops, and damage to materials. The study found that climate change accounted for an estimated 32.2 g CO2 eq/kWh of electricity generated. A number of non-greenhouse gas impacts were also analysed of which the effect on human health was the most significant category (0.214 g/kWh). The damage cost quantified in the study for the solar CSP plant was in the range of 2.10-3.31 ZA c/kWh (1.4-2.2 epsilon/MWh) with a central estimate of 2.83 ZA c/kWh (1.9 epsilon/MWh). The results suggested that climate change and human health had a combined contribution of 91% to the central estimate of the external costs which was mostly attributed by the manufacturing life cycle phase. The analysis showed that manufacturing activities have a major contribution across all impact categories. A major policy understanding is that the overall damage costs can be reduced if manufacturing the main components can be localised, to reduce the emissions caused by the transport systems. This could bring added benefits for local communities and industries. (C) 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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