Impact of carbon tax on energy generation transitioning technology
The effect of carbon taxes on the optimum generation mix in Singapore's electrical grid is investigated using two statistical programming models. The first paradigm provides economic incentives for decommissioning of high-CO2 burning power plants and promotes investment in newer coal, wind, hyd...
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2021
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1497392023-07-07T18:24:30Z Impact of carbon tax on energy generation transitioning technology Lau, Benjin En Cheng Foo Yi Shyh Eddy School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering CREATE EddyFoo@ntu.edu.sg Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering::Electric power::Production, transmission and distribution The effect of carbon taxes on the optimum generation mix in Singapore's electrical grid is investigated using two statistical programming models. The first paradigm provides economic incentives for decommissioning of high-CO2 burning power plants and promotes investment in newer coal, wind, hydro, and, in some cases, nuclear power plants. The second model uses current generating assets after the investment of new gas, solar, wind, and nuclear capacity to optimise the power flow. A carbon tax encourages the early retirement of coal-fired power plants, which are replaced with low-emission gas, wind, and nuclear plants. It is only when the carbon tax exceeds $14/tCO2 that cleaner energy generation technology enters the system and makes an impact, although wind and solar should be displaced by nuclear power if that option is permitted. Despite its high initial costs, nuclear outperforms wind and solar, because wind needs to run in conjunction with gas generators, which is not needed for nuclear energy, and the cost-to-power ratio of solar panels is very poor. Although wind and solar have the potential to reduce CO2 emissions, their feasibility for Singapore is limited because of low energy densities and seasonal nature. Bachelor of Engineering (Electrical and Electronic Engineering) 2021-06-07T05:22:39Z 2021-06-07T05:22:39Z 2016 Final Year Project (FYP) Lau, B. E. C. (2016). Impact of carbon tax on energy generation transitioning technology. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/149739 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/149739 en A1050-201 application/pdf Nanyang Technological University |
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Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering::Electric power::Production, transmission and distribution Lau, Benjin En Cheng Impact of carbon tax on energy generation transitioning technology |
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The effect of carbon taxes on the optimum generation mix in Singapore's electrical grid is investigated using two statistical programming models. The first paradigm provides economic incentives for decommissioning of high-CO2 burning power plants and promotes investment in newer coal, wind, hydro, and, in some cases, nuclear power plants. The second model uses current generating assets after the investment of new gas, solar, wind, and nuclear capacity to optimise the power flow. A carbon tax encourages the early retirement of coal-fired power plants, which are replaced with low-emission gas, wind, and nuclear plants. It is only when the carbon tax exceeds $14/tCO2 that cleaner energy generation technology enters the system and makes an impact, although wind and solar should be displaced by nuclear power if that option is permitted. Despite its high initial costs, nuclear outperforms wind and solar, because wind needs to run in conjunction with gas generators, which is not needed for nuclear energy, and the cost-to-power ratio of solar panels is very poor. Although wind and solar have the potential to reduce CO2 emissions, their feasibility for Singapore is limited because of low energy densities and seasonal nature. |
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Foo Yi Shyh Eddy |
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Foo Yi Shyh Eddy Lau, Benjin En Cheng |
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Final Year Project |
author |
Lau, Benjin En Cheng |
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Lau, Benjin En Cheng |
title |
Impact of carbon tax on energy generation transitioning technology |
title_short |
Impact of carbon tax on energy generation transitioning technology |
title_full |
Impact of carbon tax on energy generation transitioning technology |
title_fullStr |
Impact of carbon tax on energy generation transitioning technology |
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Impact of carbon tax on energy generation transitioning technology |
title_sort |
impact of carbon tax on energy generation transitioning technology |
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Nanyang Technological University |
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2021 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/149739 |
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