TY - JOUR
T1 - Assessing climate risks to Net Zero power system in Great Britain
AU - Kuriakose, Jaise
AU - Martínez Ceseña, Eduardo A.
AU - Wood, Ruth
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - The electrification of heating and surface transport, alongside increased electricity generation from wind and solar, is central to achieving the UK’s Net Zero climate change target. Simultaneously, the UK’s third Climate Change Risk Assessment highlights vulnerabilities in energy infrastructure due to changing climate patterns, including rainfall variability, windstorms, and heatwaves. Against this backdrop, this article evaluates selected 2050 Net Zero energy scenarios and assesses their impact on the vulnerability of Great Britain’s power transmission and distribution networks to climate change. It reviews seasonal climate risks to Net Zero supply and demand technologies and introduces a framework for climate impact analysis, focusing on windstorms. Under a high-emission scenario, increased cooling demand combined with reduced wind energy supply during summers presents a risk, particularly during heat waves, necessitating careful planning of network capacity for system operation. Winter windstorms, which may extend into autumn and spring, pose additional threats to infrastructure at a time of high electricity demand due to heat pumps, potentially leading to power outages. A windstorm impact model based on historical data suggests that while planned network investments may increase capacity, they do not fully prevent outages caused by extreme weather. Demand flexibility emerges as a critical low-regret solution, capable of reducing outages during extreme events. However, significant policy changes are needed to promote widespread flexibility adoption in the UK, addressing both regulatory and social barriers. A diverse portfolio of demand response mechanisms is recommended to enhance system resilience during extreme weather.
AB - The electrification of heating and surface transport, alongside increased electricity generation from wind and solar, is central to achieving the UK’s Net Zero climate change target. Simultaneously, the UK’s third Climate Change Risk Assessment highlights vulnerabilities in energy infrastructure due to changing climate patterns, including rainfall variability, windstorms, and heatwaves. Against this backdrop, this article evaluates selected 2050 Net Zero energy scenarios and assesses their impact on the vulnerability of Great Britain’s power transmission and distribution networks to climate change. It reviews seasonal climate risks to Net Zero supply and demand technologies and introduces a framework for climate impact analysis, focusing on windstorms. Under a high-emission scenario, increased cooling demand combined with reduced wind energy supply during summers presents a risk, particularly during heat waves, necessitating careful planning of network capacity for system operation. Winter windstorms, which may extend into autumn and spring, pose additional threats to infrastructure at a time of high electricity demand due to heat pumps, potentially leading to power outages. A windstorm impact model based on historical data suggests that while planned network investments may increase capacity, they do not fully prevent outages caused by extreme weather. Demand flexibility emerges as a critical low-regret solution, capable of reducing outages during extreme events. However, significant policy changes are needed to promote widespread flexibility adoption in the UK, addressing both regulatory and social barriers. A diverse portfolio of demand response mechanisms is recommended to enhance system resilience during extreme weather.
KW - carbon emissions
KW - demand flexibility
KW - extreme weather
KW - Net Zero
KW - power system
KW - resilience
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105009839462
U2 - 10.1080/17583004.2025.2525932
DO - 10.1080/17583004.2025.2525932
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105009839462
SN - 1758-3004
VL - 16
JO - Carbon Management
JF - Carbon Management
IS - 1
M1 - 2525932
ER -