Knowledge Agora



Similar Articles

Title Material Requirements, Circularity Potential and Embodied Emissions Associated with Wind Energy
ID_Doc 29324
Authors Savvidou, G; Johnsson, F
Title Material Requirements, Circularity Potential and Embodied Emissions Associated with Wind Energy
Year 2023
Published
Abstract Wind energy, which is often posited as a key decarbonisation option, represents one of the fastest-growing energy sources globally in recent years. Research on the material requirements for transitioning to a low-carbon elec-tricity system at national levels, as well as research exploring the potential of the electricity system to serve as a source of secondary materials remains underexplored. We address these gaps in the knowledge by analysing the stocks and flows in a wind power system towards 2050 using Sweden as a case study, including the demands for bulk (concrete and steel) and critical materials (neodymium and dysprosium), through a dynamic material flow analysis based on policy-relevant scenarios. We demonstrate that some of the investigated scenarios generate substantial increases in the stocks and flows of bulk and critical materials. We show that, after 2045, the year by which Sweden has committed to reducing greenhouse gas emissions to net-zero, the inflows show a decreasing trend while the outflows show an increasing trend, suggesting the beginning of the closing of the material loops, provided untapped circularity potentials transform into actual capacities. For wind power to comply with emissions targets, the steel and concrete production processes will need to be decarbonised at a rate in line with the climate targets. We show that the adoption of mitigation measures to decarbonise the concrete and steel industries aligned with Sweden's climate change mitigation agenda, has the potential to reduce embodied carbon emissions for wind power infrastructure in 2045 from corresponding to around 4 % of current total national emissions in the absence of measures to practically negligible levels. National policies need to focus on promoting the implementation of circularity strategies and decarbonising the entire value chain of the involved materials.
PDF https://doi.org/10.1016/j.spc.2023.07.012

Similar Articles

ID Score Article
16985 Abdelshafy, A; Walther, G Exploring the effects of energy transition on the industrial value chains and alternative resources: A case study from the German federal state of North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW)(2022)
16942 Simoes, SG; Lima, ATM Materials, resources, and CO2 impacts of building new renewable power plants to reach EU's goals of carbon neutrality(2023)
3366 Jensen, PD; Purnell, P; Velenturf, APM Highlighting the need to embed circular economy in low carbon infrastructure decommissioning: The case of offshore wind(2020)
3583 Kramer, KJ; Abrahamsen, AB; Beauson, J; Hansen, UE; Clausen, NE; Velenturf, APM; Schmidt, M Quantifying circular economy pathways of decommissioned onshore wind turbines: The case of Denmark and Germany(2024)
20845 Gast, L; Meng, FR; Morgan, D Assessing the circularity of onshore wind turbines: Using material flow analysis for improving end-of-life resource management(2024)
19706 Teixeira, B; Brito, MC; Mateus, A Raw materials for the Portuguese decarbonization roadmap: The case of solar photovoltaics and wind energy(2024)
15791 Mobarakeh, MR; Kienberger, T Climate neutrality strategies for energy-intensive industries: An Austrian case study(2022)
1999 Mulvaney, D; Richards, RM; Bazilian, MD; Hensley, E; Clough, G; Sridhar, S Progress towards a circular economy in materials to decarbonize electricity and mobility(2021)
19333 Pauliuk, S; Heeren, N Material efficiency and its contribution to climate change mitigation in Germany : A deep decarbonization scenario analysis until 2060(2021)Journal Of Industrial Ecology, 25.0, 2
28757 van Oorschot, J; Sprecher, B; Roelofs, B; van der Horst, J; van der Voet, E Towards a low-carbon and circular economy: Scenarios for metal stocks and flows in the Dutch electricity system(2022)
Scroll