Looking under the hood: A comparison of techno-economic assumptions across national and global integrated assessment models

Integrated assessment models are extensively used in the analysis of climate change mitigation and are informing national decision makers as well as contribute to international scientific assessments. This paper conducts a comprehensive review of techno-economic assumptions in the electricity sector among fifteen different global and national integrated assessment models. Particular focus is given to six major economies in the world: Brazil, China, the EU, India, Japan and the US.

The comparison reveals that techno-economic characteristics are quite different across integrated assessment models, both for the base year and future years. It is, however, important to recognize that techno-economic assessments from the literature exhibit an equally large range of parameters as the integrated assessment models reviewed.

Beyond numerical differences, the representation of technologies also differs among models, which needs to be taken into account when comparing numerical parameters. While desirable, it seems difficult to fully harmonize techno-economic parameters across a broader range of models due to structural differences in the representation of technology. Therefore, making techno-economic parameters available in the future, together with of the technology representation as well as the exact definitions of the parameters should become the standard approach as it allows an open discussion of appropriate assumptions.

Authors

PBL Authors
Harmen Sytze de Boer David Gernaat Detlef van Vuuren
Other authors
Volker Krey (et.al)

Specifications

Publication title
Looking under the hood: A comparison of techno-economic assumptions across national and global integrated assessment models
Publication date
21 December 2018
Publication type
Artikel
Publication language
Engels
Magazine
Energy
Issue
Volume 172, 1 April 2019, Pages 1254-1267
Product number
4180