Urban energy futures: Unraveling the dynamics of city-scale building energy use and CO2 emissions under mid-century scenarios
- 1School of Meteorology, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK, USA (chenghao.wang@ou.edu)
- 2Department of Geography and Environmental Sustainability, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK, USA (chenghao.wang@ou.edu)
- 3National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Golden, CO, USA
- 4Department of Earth System Science, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA
- 5Woods Institute for the Environment, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA
- 6Precourt Institute for Energy, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA
Residential and commercial buildings jointly account for 39% of energy consumption and 28% of greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S. In densely populated urban areas, the share of energy use and emissions attributable to buildings can be even higher. The future evolution of building energy use and associated carbon emissions is uncertain, with potentially substantial variations in climate conditions, socioeconomic development, and power sector trajectories; accounting for these in future projections is often compounded by limited data availability and resolution of conventional modeling approaches. To address these challenges, in this study, we employed a bottom-up, high-resolution modeling approach and evaluated city-scale building energy consumption and CO2 emissions across 277 urban areas in the U.S. under various mid-21st century scenarios. Our findings reveal substantial spatial and temporal variations in future changes in building energy use and CO2 emissions among U.S. cities under a variety of climate, socioeconomic, and power sector evolution scenarios. On average, a 1°C warming at the city scale projects a 13.8% increase in building energy use intensity for cooling, accompanied by an approximately 11% decrease in energy use intensity for heating, albeit with notable spatial disparities. Collectively, driven by global warming and socioeconomic development, mid-century city-level building energy use is projected to rise on average by 17.5–39.8% under all scenarios except for SSP3-7.0 when compared with the last decade. In contrast, city-level building CO2 emissions are projected to decrease in most urban areas (averaging from 10.6% to 66.0% under different scenarios), with spatial variations primarily influenced by climate change and power sector decarbonization.
How to cite: Wang, C., Reyna, J., Horsey, H., and Jackson, R.: Urban energy futures: Unraveling the dynamics of city-scale building energy use and CO2 emissions under mid-century scenarios, EGU General Assembly 2024, Vienna, Austria, 14–19 Apr 2024, EGU24-13309, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-13309, 2024.