Increasing the use of solar energy offers an important chance of reducing American carbon emissions
A new study led by Harvard Th Chan School of Public Health Projects that could reduce the increasing generation of solar energy in the US by 15% of carbon dioxide emissions by 8.54 million tonnes per year. The findings underline how strategic investments in solar energy can maximize climate benefits, depending on the region.
Francesca Dominici, the accompanying author and director of the Harvard Data Science Initiative, said: “This is an exciting study in the sense that it uses the power of Data Science to provide insights to policy makers and stakeholders about how we can achieve CO2 reduction goals.”
The research emphasizes a grim imbalance in the American energy mix: in 2023 fossil fuels accounted for 60% of electricity generation, while solar energy contributed only 3.9%, according to the US Energy Administration. The expansion of solar energy can not only reduce CO2 emissions, but also the harmful air pollutants that are responsible for adverse health results, such as fine particles.
The study analyzed electricity generation, demand and emission data of the Energy Information Administration per hour for a period of five years from mid-2018. Researchers developed a high-resolution statistical model to simulate how added solar generation influences CO2 emissions both locally and in adjacent regions in 13 American energy booster.
In California, for example, an increase in the afternoon of 15% in the solar output reduced emissions with 147.18 tons in the first hour and another 16.08 tons after eight hours. These delayed reductions were not quantified in earlier studies.
The analysis also identified which regions benefit the most from increased solar capacity. States such as California, Florida, Texas and the Midwest were found to deliver too large emissions -cuts by unit of solar investments, while places such as New England and Tennessee showed a lower return.
Moreover, the regional overflow effects were considerable. A boost of 15% in the solar production of California led to daily CO2 reductions of 913 tons in the northwest and 1.942 tons in the southwest, which underlines the importance of interregional cooperation in the implementation of clean energy.
“Our study offers policymakers and investors a route map for aiming solar investments in which emission reductions are the most impactful and where Zonne -Energy -infrastructure can yield the highest efficiency,” said Chest author Arpita Biswas, assistant professor of Informatics. “From a research perspective, our findings also show the power of utilizing large -scale energy data with high resolution to generate usable insights.”
Research report:Quantifying effects of the acceptance of solar energy on CO2 emission reduction
