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Impacts of climate change, population growth, and power sector decarbonization on urban building energy use.


ABSTRACT: Climate, technologies, and socio-economic changes will influence future building energy use in cities. However, current low-resolution regional and state-level analyses are insufficient to reliably assist city-level decision-making. Here we estimate mid-century hourly building energy consumption in 277 U.S. urban areas using a bottom-up approach. The projected future climate change results in heterogeneous changes in energy use intensity (EUI) among urban areas, particularly under higher warming scenarios, with on average 10.1-37.7% increases in the frequency of peak building electricity EUI but over 110% increases in some cities. For each 1 °C of warming, the mean city-scale space-conditioning EUI experiences an average increase/decrease of ~14%/ ~ 10% for space cooling/heating. Heterogeneous city-scale building source energy use changes are primarily driven by population and power sector changes, on average ranging from -9% to 40% with consistent south-north gradients under different scenarios. Across the scenarios considered here, the changes in city-scale building source energy use, when averaged over all urban areas, are as follows: -2.5% to -2.0% due to climate change, 7.3% to 52.2% due to population growth, and -17.1% to -8.9% due to power sector decarbonization. Our findings underscore the necessity of considering intercity heterogeneity when developing sustainable and resilient urban energy systems.

SUBMITTER: Wang C 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10584859 | biostudies-literature | 2023 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Impacts of climate change, population growth, and power sector decarbonization on urban building energy use.

Wang Chenghao C   Song Jiyun J   Shi Dachuan D   Reyna Janet L JL   Horsey Henry H   Feron Sarah S   Zhou Yuyu Y   Ouyang Zutao Z   Li Ying Y   Jackson Robert B RB  

Nature communications 20231018 1


Climate, technologies, and socio-economic changes will influence future building energy use in cities. However, current low-resolution regional and state-level analyses are insufficient to reliably assist city-level decision-making. Here we estimate mid-century hourly building energy consumption in 277 U.S. urban areas using a bottom-up approach. The projected future climate change results in heterogeneous changes in energy use intensity (EUI) among urban areas, particularly under higher warming  ...[more]

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