Residential Natural Gas Demand Response Potential during Extreme Cold Events in Electricity-Gas Coupled Energy Systems

In regions where natural gas is used for both power generation and heating buildings, extreme cold weather events can place the electrical system under enormous stress and challenge the ability to meet residential heating and electric demands. Residential demand response has long been used in the po...

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Main Authors: Andrew Speake, Paul Donohoo-Vallett, Eric Wilson, Emily Chen, Craig Christensen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-10-01
Series:Energies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/13/19/5192
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spelling doaj-ce90f48ca32e4abaac89fc3fae1283412020-11-25T03:59:17ZengMDPI AGEnergies1996-10732020-10-01135192519210.3390/en13195192Residential Natural Gas Demand Response Potential during Extreme Cold Events in Electricity-Gas Coupled Energy SystemsAndrew Speake0Paul Donohoo-Vallett1Eric Wilson2Emily Chen3Craig Christensen4National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO 80401, USAU.S. Department of Energy, Washington, DC 20585, USANational Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO 80401, USAU.S. Department of Energy, Washington, DC 20585, USANational Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO 80401, USAIn regions where natural gas is used for both power generation and heating buildings, extreme cold weather events can place the electrical system under enormous stress and challenge the ability to meet residential heating and electric demands. Residential demand response has long been used in the power sector to curtail summer electric load, but these types of programs in general have not seen adoption in the natural gas sector during winter months. Natural gas demand response (NG-DR) has garnered interest given recent extreme cold weather events in the United States; however, the magnitude of savings and potential impacts—to occupants and energy markets—are not well understood. We present a case-study analysis of the technical potential for residential natural gas demand response in the northeast United States that utilizes diverse whole-building energy simulations and high-performance computing. Our results show that NG-DR applied to residential heating systems during extreme cold-weather conditions could reduce natural gas demand by 1–29% based on conservative and aggressive strategies, respectively. This indicates a potential to improve the resilience of gas and electric systems during stressful events, which we examine by estimating the impact on energy costs and electricity generation from natural gas. We also explore relationships between hourly indoor temperatures, demand response, and building envelope efficiency.https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/13/19/5192demand responsebuilding energy efficiencyenergy resiliencebuilding stock modelingdemand side management
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrew Speake
Paul Donohoo-Vallett
Eric Wilson
Emily Chen
Craig Christensen
spellingShingle Andrew Speake
Paul Donohoo-Vallett
Eric Wilson
Emily Chen
Craig Christensen
Residential Natural Gas Demand Response Potential during Extreme Cold Events in Electricity-Gas Coupled Energy Systems
Energies
demand response
building energy efficiency
energy resilience
building stock modeling
demand side management
author_facet Andrew Speake
Paul Donohoo-Vallett
Eric Wilson
Emily Chen
Craig Christensen
author_sort Andrew Speake
title Residential Natural Gas Demand Response Potential during Extreme Cold Events in Electricity-Gas Coupled Energy Systems
title_short Residential Natural Gas Demand Response Potential during Extreme Cold Events in Electricity-Gas Coupled Energy Systems
title_full Residential Natural Gas Demand Response Potential during Extreme Cold Events in Electricity-Gas Coupled Energy Systems
title_fullStr Residential Natural Gas Demand Response Potential during Extreme Cold Events in Electricity-Gas Coupled Energy Systems
title_full_unstemmed Residential Natural Gas Demand Response Potential during Extreme Cold Events in Electricity-Gas Coupled Energy Systems
title_sort residential natural gas demand response potential during extreme cold events in electricity-gas coupled energy systems
publisher MDPI AG
series Energies
issn 1996-1073
publishDate 2020-10-01
description In regions where natural gas is used for both power generation and heating buildings, extreme cold weather events can place the electrical system under enormous stress and challenge the ability to meet residential heating and electric demands. Residential demand response has long been used in the power sector to curtail summer electric load, but these types of programs in general have not seen adoption in the natural gas sector during winter months. Natural gas demand response (NG-DR) has garnered interest given recent extreme cold weather events in the United States; however, the magnitude of savings and potential impacts—to occupants and energy markets—are not well understood. We present a case-study analysis of the technical potential for residential natural gas demand response in the northeast United States that utilizes diverse whole-building energy simulations and high-performance computing. Our results show that NG-DR applied to residential heating systems during extreme cold-weather conditions could reduce natural gas demand by 1–29% based on conservative and aggressive strategies, respectively. This indicates a potential to improve the resilience of gas and electric systems during stressful events, which we examine by estimating the impact on energy costs and electricity generation from natural gas. We also explore relationships between hourly indoor temperatures, demand response, and building envelope efficiency.
topic demand response
building energy efficiency
energy resilience
building stock modeling
demand side management
url https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1073/13/19/5192
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