Summer Covariability of Surface Climate For Renewable Energy Across the Contiguous United States: Role of the North Atlantic Subtropical High

56 pages This study examines the joint spatiotemporal variability of summertime climate linked to renewable energy sources (precipitation and streamflow, wind speeds, insolation) and energy demand drivers (temperature, relative humidity, and a heat index) across the contiguous United States (CONUS)...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Doering, Kenji
Other Authors: Steinschneider, Scott, Anderson, C. Lindsay, Reed, Patrick Micheal
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1813/70057
http://dissertations.umi.com/cornell:10746
https://doi.org/10.7298/0e3m-0p97
Description
Summary:56 pages This study examines the joint spatiotemporal variability of summertime climate linked to renewable energy sources (precipitation and streamflow, wind speeds, insolation) and energy demand drivers (temperature, relative humidity, and a heat index) across the contiguous United States (CONUS) between 1948 and 2015. Canonical correlation analysis is used to identify the primary modes of joint variability between wind speeds and precipitation and related patterns of the other hydrometeorological variables. The first two modes exhibit a pan-US dipole with lobes in the eastern and central CONUS. Composite analysis shows that these modes are directly related to the displacement of the western ridge of the North Atlantic subtropical high (NASH), suggesting that a single, large-scale feature of atmospheric circulation drives much of the large-scale climate co-variability related to summertime renewable energy supply and demand across the CONUS. The impacts of this climate feature on the U.S. energy system are shown more directly by examining changes in surface climate variables at existing and potential sites of renewable energy infrastructure and locations of high energy demand. Finally, different phases of the NASH are related to concurrent and lagged modes of oceanic and atmospheric climate variability in the Pacific and Atlantic basins, with results suggesting that springtime climate over both oceans may provide some potential to predict summer variability in the NASH and its associated surface climate. The implications of these findings for the impacts of climate variability and change on integrated renewable energy systems over the CONUS are discussed.