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Showing content from https://www.smart-energy.com/top-stories/smart-grid-environmental-benefits/ below:

Smart Grid Environmental Benefits | Smart Energy International

 

It takes a Smart Grid to deliver PHEV, demand response, energy efficiency and reduced pollution — stating the benefits.

What are the environmental benefits of the Smart Grid?

Why are environmental benefits not included in Smart Grid dicussions?

Environmental benefits are usually only mentioned in passing in Smart Grid documents.  The dimensions of a Smart Grid’s environmental benefits tend to make them difficult to quantify.  Perhaps because:

The last point—that environmental benefits are often dispersed and therefore not immediately tangible—seems especially relevant.  Unfortunately, this trend also extends to some of the other kinds of benefits of smart grid technologies.   In other words, the modern grid as a concept suffers from high “transaction costs.”  Transaction costs in this sense can be placed in the context of the economist Ronald Coase’s theory: that a highly dispersed set of downstream beneficiaries will have trouble overcoming the transaction costs to build the case for what would otherwise be an economically efficient solution.

Collecting these stakeholders is a difficult task.  Smart grid stakeholders, therefore, need to make a clear case for the environmental benefits of their technologies, and appropriately identify and approach the beneficiaries.  A recent paper by Resources for the Future notes the potential financial importance of cataloguing the carbon emissions offset by the implementation of renewable technologies.  The paper estimates net losses to the power sector from carbon emissions legislation could be as high as $9 billion.  Given the high value of carbon credits, keeping track of emissions reductions and investments that enable emissions reductions will hold an important financial incentive.  The environmental benefits for smart grid technologies do not often come out of the direct use of the technologies, but out of programs that creatively utilize technologies, or through programs and resources enabled by the availability of a modern grid.

By Alex Zheng

Adapted with permission from www.smartgridnews.com 


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