Wednesday, December 26, 2018

Another day, another feeble climate scare story

Coal-hungry China [image credit: democraticunderground.com]


Brace for impact: 'Hotter days will boost Chinese residential electric use'. Are we supposed to weep instead of sleep? The report refers to 'China's low-carbon policy', which must be something other than the one which sees it opening a new coal-fired power station almost every week, and which led to a massive long-term import contract with Russia for natural gas. Who are they kidding?

A new study from Duke University and Fudan University in China is the first to estimate how much Chinese residential electricity consumption would increase due to climate change.

It's a lot, says Phys.org.

By the end of the 21st century, each degree Celsius increase in global mean surface temperature (GMST) would raise average Chinese residential electricity use by about 9 percent.

Peak electricity use will rise 36 percent for every increased degree Celsius.

By 2099, scientists estimate mean surface temperature will be 2-5 C hotter than today. If consumption patterns remained similar to today, average residential electricity demand in China would rise by 18 percent at the low end and as much as 55 percent at the high end. Peak usage would rise by a minimum of 72 percent.

This finding has important implications for energy grid planning, but even without climate change, average household electricity consumption in China is projected to double by 2040 due to rising incomes.

The study, "Climate Change and Residential Electricity Consumption in the Yangtze River Delta, China," by Yating Li, William A. Pizer, and Libo Wu, appears the week of December 24 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"Our findings contribute solid evidence supporting China's low-carbon policy by showing how important increasing demand from the residential sector will be," said Libo Wu, a professor and director of the Center for Energy Economics and Strategies Studies at Fudan.

To examine how customers responded to daily temperature changes, the authors analyzed data from more than 800,000 residential customers in the Pudong district of Shanghai between 2014 and 2016.

They combined these data on consumer behavior with a variety of detailed climate model simulations to construct the relationship between projected mean global temperature change at the end of the century and localized projected impacts in China.

"This state-of-the-art approach has been applied to communities in the United States, but this is the first application in China," said Billy Pizer, a professor in Duke's Sanford School of Public Policy and Duke Kunshan University in Jiangsu Province, China.

Most previous studies of these impacts have been done in Western countries.

Continued here.



from Climate Change Skeptic Blogs via hj on Inoreader http://bit.ly/2ENqkt9

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