Washington DC
New York
Toronto
Distribution: (800) 510 0384
Press ID
  • Login
Fairmont Post
No Result
View All Result
Wednesday, October 22, 2025
  • Business • Financial
  • Culture • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle • Travel
  • Technology • Science
  • Environment • Conservation
  • FinTech • Blockchain NFT
  • Business • Financial
  • Culture • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle • Travel
  • Technology • Science
  • Environment • Conservation
  • FinTech • Blockchain NFT
No Result
View All Result
Fairmont Post
No Result
View All Result

To Cool Tomorrow’s Buildings, Power Sector Must Grow

Electricity demand tied to rising temperatures is projected to climb in the U.S., begetting the need for a significantly expanded power sector

Nicole Choquette by Nicole Choquette
May 5, 2021
in Clean Energy
A A

Temperatures are rising. Eight of the warmest 10 recorded years of globally averaged temperature have occurred after 1998. Coupled with that increase is a growing demand for electricity to cool buildings. A new study published recently in the journal Nature Communications projects that electricity demand tied to cooling U.S. buildings will grow as peak temperatures rise, and so too would the need for an expanded power sector.

Researchers from the U.S. Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory found that building new capacity in the U.S. to satisfy that projected demand in a warmer future could cost an additional $1 trillion spent by the end of the century. The research ties together interactions between sectors–electricity, water, agriculture, among others–to paint a picture of how electricity demand and the nation’s capacity to meet it may materialize in future climate scenarios.

READ ALSO

PG&E and Smart Wires Collaborate on Innovative Grid Enhancement Project in San Jose, CA

Sustainability Partners Takes Helm of Daily Operations for Ecofin U.S. Renewables Infrastructure Trust

Where previous research has explored the nation’s future energy needs in detail, models that depict the evolution of heating and cooling demand in buildings do not typically consider such a wide breadth of influences. Here, the authors consider electricity trade between regions, labor productivity, changes in building floorspace and shell designs, fuel prices and availability, shifting population sizes, and changes in technology and water availability, among other dynamic forces that shape demand.

“We have access to detailed models that capture electricity use down to the hour,” said lead author Zarrar Khan, a computational scientist at the Joint Global Change Research Institute, a partnership between Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and the University of Maryland where researchers explore the interactions between human, energy, and environmental systems. “But they don’t capture all the other dynamics that we include in this model. We combine input from multiple sectors to get a full picture, and I think this is one of the first studies to do that while capturing sub-annual temperature impacts on building heating and cooling demands.”

The study highlights how increases in peak electricity demand resulting from rising temperatures–not the increases in annual demand–determine how much new capacity, from power plants to wind turbines, may be needed.

Temperature change dictates energy investments

The authors modeled two scenarios to project how capacity would need to grow to meet future U.S. energy demand. The first entails a future where temperatures change in response to a changing climate, with peak electricity demand rising in turn. The second entails a future where temperatures and their associated peak demands remain constant from 2015 onward.

In each case, temperature changes are modeled on an hourly basis to drive electricity demand in monthly day and night demand segments. The top 10 hours of highest demand in each year are captured separately to represent the annual peak. Comparing the two futures allowed the researchers to isolate temperature-related influence on electricity demand.

They then estimated the cost of building the capacity to satisfy that demand. Both scenarios were projected through the year 2100. Overall, cooling demand was projected to rise while heating demand declined.

But, to paint that full picture, the authors had to make a set of assumptions about how populations would grow, technological and economic trends would unfold, and what level of emissions would follow. To establish that baseline set of assumptions, they incorporated a socioeconomic pathway in their model–described as a “middle of the road” approach. In this hypothetical future, social, technological, and economic trends roughly follow their historic trajectories, and greenhouse gas emissions continue to rise.

In a scenario where U.S. temperatures do not change from 2015 levels, the authors projected that California’s power capacity would need to rise to 102 gigawatts by 2100 to meet demand. That upgrade, they estimate, could represent a $322 billion investment spent from 2015 to the end of the century.

Factor in future temperatures, however, and California’s needed capacity climbs to 120 gigawatts, requiring a $393 billion investment spent by 2100. Similarly, Washington would need 87 gigawatts of capacity installed by 2100 to meet demand (76 gigawatts without temperature-related impacts), corresponding to $248 billion spent between 2015 and 2100.

Zoom out to a national scale, and the 2100 national energy capacity required to meet demand reaches 2,017 gigawatts, with temperature changes factored in; this corresponds to a $7.3 trillion investment spent by 2100. In that scenario, the costs related directly to temperature changes total $1 trillion. As of March 2020, the nation’s electricity generating capacity was roughly 1,200 gigawatts.

The largest temperature-related increases in capacity were concentrated in California, Illinois, Pennsylvania, and Texas–with Texas projected to need 154-gigawatt capacity by 2100, and $413 billion spent by that time to reach it.

Results vary

The impacts are far from uniform across states, as they are driven by unequal distributions of fuel prices, availability and costs of renewable resources, and climate conditions, among other factors. In California and Texas, for example, where relatively lower natural gas prices combine with greater forecasted economic and population growth, the authors project larger temperature-related gas investments.

In midwestern states where wind is abundant, the authors anticipate larger investments in wind energy. In each scenario, the cheapest fuels are dispatched first.

Cooling and heating demands vary across U.S. climates. Interestingly, the authors did not place new power-generating capacity near areas where electricity demand peaks. Instead, electricity trade patterns offer some relief and flexibility in regions where grid-connected states can transmit power between one another, potentially satisfying some level of demand without the cost of installing new power plants.

Cooling demand accounted for roughly 10 percent of total U.S. electricity use in 2020.

Exploring alternate pathways

Altering assumptions about future economic trends and emissions levels shifts the results. A future in which fossil fuel use is high and lifestyles demand greater energy use, for example, boosts annual electricity use in buildings an estimated 50-73 percent higher. In the future, the team will look toward other issues, from changes brought by electric vehicles to grid storage.

“If you just look at the annual load,” said systems engineer and coauthor Marshall Wise, “then it’s pretty near impossible to show why there’s a demand for storage, or what good it would do. With the varying intra-annual electricity demand, though, you see the pressures. Then you say, ‘OK, how much can something like storage help mitigate those pressures on the need for new capacity while reducing cost?’ That’s why storage is a clear next step for us to analyze.”

This research was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science.

FP Newsroom

PG&E and Smart Wires Collaborate on Innovative Grid Enhancement Project in San Jose, CA
Clean Energy

PG&E and Smart Wires Collaborate on Innovative Grid Enhancement Project in San Jose, CA

May 30, 2025
Sustainability Partners Takes Helm of Daily Operations for Ecofin U.S. Renewables Infrastructure Trust
Clean Energy

Sustainability Partners Takes Helm of Daily Operations for Ecofin U.S. Renewables Infrastructure Trust

May 19, 2025
Chasen Nevett: A New Era in Offshore Wind and Maritime Renewable Energy
Clean Energy

Chasen Nevett: A New Era in Offshore Wind and Maritime Renewable Energy

March 19, 2025
The ProLift Rigging Company on Microgrids: Enhancing Energy Resilience and Independence
Clean Energy

The ProLift Rigging Company on Microgrids: Enhancing Energy Resilience and Independence

March 6, 2025
New $20 Million Initiative to Boost Home Repairs and Energy Efficiency in Alabama and West Georgia
Clean Energy

New $20 Million Initiative to Boost Home Repairs and Energy Efficiency in Alabama and West Georgia

February 23, 2025
Clean Energy

Secretary of Energy Chris Wright Announced Key Appointments to Senior Leadership Team to Drive Trump’s Energy Agenda

February 12, 2025

News in Focus

Steel Dynamics Reports Strong Q3 2025 Financial Performance and Milestones

How to Boost Your Influencer Start as a Newcomer: The 2026 Playbook

Uniden to Unveil Next Era of Communication Gear at SEMA 2025

Ukrainian Ceramicist Serhii Martynko Rebuilds His Craft in the United States

Upcoming Talent Vick-Knew-Zeus Talks About the Future of Social Media and More

Sentinel Net Lease Expands Portfolio With $23 Million Acquisition in Denver’s Thriving Southeast Submarket

How Parfymonline.se Turned a Technical Setback Into a Comeback Story

Industry Watch: 925 Sterling Silver Stacking Rings Enter the ‘Accessible Luxury’ Lane Ahead of Holidays

NexCore Group Breaks Ground on Two Innovative Senior Living Communities in Denver and North Bethesda

The Perfect Pods

The Wakizashi: Debunking the Myth of the Samurai’s “Suicide Blade”

The Unique Charms of Japanese and Burmese Swords: A Journey Through Blades

National Flood Insurance Program Shutdown Disrupts Home Closings; Neptune Flood Steps In

Historic High Seas Treaty Secures 61 Ratifications, Set to Transform Ocean Conservation by 2026

Passing the Torch: How Hebrew Education Shapes Identity and Community

Caring for Your Collection: Jeremy Millul’s Guide to Jewelry Maintenance and Preservation

From Case Sharing to Standard Setting: Leverage Consulting’s Global Contribution

An Exclusive Guide by Arshad Azim on Raising Capital Successfully

Changing the Narrative: A Swedish Clothing Brand Champions Neurodivergent Identity Through Design

How to Help Patients Thrive Beyond the Status Quo With Insights From Dr. Michael Johnson

Shaping Tomorrow: A.C. Roper on Faith, Integrity, and Lasting Leadership

Aclara Resources Secures $5 Million From U.S. DFC for Carina Rare Earths Project

Blue Heron Appoints Eric Lent as Chief Revenue Officer to Drive Expansion Into New U.S. Markets

This Lawyer Stops Blackmailers and Extortionists in Their Tracks

GOVMINT Partners With John Mercanti to Unveil Historic Coin Collection

FOMC Unanimously Approves Updates to Monetary Policy Statement

Turning Pain Into Poetry: Indie Artist Stevie Nicole Finds Light in Life’s Valleys

Dr. Dimitris Panagopoulos Leads a Breakthrough in Multi-Matrix Detection

Cubic Defense Awarded Major Contract by USAF for Advanced Air Combat Training

Preska Thomas, Melanie Perkins, and More Female Founders Redefining the Future of Tech and Entrepreneurship

  • The Biggest Hackathon for AI Enthusiasts is Coming This Fall: ai4hack!

https://marketsherald.com/the-biggest-hackathon-for-ai-enthusiasts-is-coming-this-fall-ai4hack/

#GuestPostService #SponsoredPost #DigitalPR #SEOAgency #ContentMarketing #MediaCoverage #BacklinkService #AuthorityBranding #FounderLife #MarketingAgency #EarnedMedia #PressReleaseDistribution #LinkBuildingService #StartupMarketing
  • Neutec Group Partners With Bioz to Enhance Scientific Product Validation

https://hudsonweekly.com/neutec-group-partners-with-bioz-to-enhance-scientific-product-validation/

#GuestPostService #SponsoredPost #DigitalPR #SEOAgency #ContentMarketing #MediaCoverage #BacklinkService #AuthorityBranding #FounderLife #MarketingAgency #EarnedMedia #PressReleaseDistribution #LinkBuildingService #StartupMarketing
  • California’s Lancaster Introduces Hydrogen-Powered Backup Traffic Signals to Boost Public Safety

https://hudsonweekly.com/californias-lancaster-introduces-hydrogen-powered-backup-traffic-signals-to-boost-public-safety/

#GuestPostService #SponsoredPost #DigitalPR #SEOAgency #ContentMarketing #MediaCoverage #BacklinkService #AuthorityBranding #FounderLife #MarketingAgency #EarnedMedia #PressReleaseDistribution #LinkBuildingService #StartupMarketing
  • 5 Types of Awards You Can Use at Your Employee Recognition Event

https://marketsherald.com/5-types-of-awards-you-can-use-at-your-employee-recognition-event/

#GuestPostService #SponsoredPost #DigitalPR #SEOAgency #ContentMarketing #MediaCoverage #BacklinkService #AuthorityBranding #FounderLife #MarketingAgency #EarnedMedia #PressReleaseDistribution #LinkBuildingService #StartupMarketing
  • Steel Dynamics Reports Strong Q3 2025 Financial Performance and Milestones

https://fairmontpost.com/steel-dynamics-reports-strong-q3-2025-financial-performance-and-milestones/

#nyc #losangeles #chicago #houston #phoenix #philadelphia #sandiego #dallas #sanfrancisco #seattle #denver #washingtondc #boston #detroit #vancouver #toronto #publicrelations #marketingagency #earnedmedia #editorial #marketing #guestpost #guestposting #sponsored #sponsoredpost #steel
  • Exclusive Interview With Samuel L Pierce

https://lincolncitizen.com/exclusive-interview-with-samuel-l-pierce/

#nyc #losangeles #chicago #houston #phoenix #philadelphia #sandiego #dallas #sanfrancisco #seattle #denver #washingtondc #boston #detroit #vancouver #toronto #publicrelations #marketingagency #earnedmedia #editorial #marketing #guestpost #guestposting #sponsored #sponsoredpost #movies #celebrities
  • Every Child in America Doesn’t Need Therapy

https://hudsonweekly.com/every-child-in-america-doesnt-need-therapy/

#nyc #losangeles #chicago #houston #phoenix #philadelphia #sandiego #dallas #sanfrancisco #seattle #denver #washingtondc #boston #detroit #vancouver #toronto #publicrelations #marketingagency #earnedmedia #editorial #marketing #guestpost #guestposting #sponsored #sponsoredpost #therapy #childrens
  • Scenic Sotheby’s International Realty Welcomes Top Agent Anne Winicki to Their Team

https://belmontstar.com/scenic-sothebys-international-realty-welcomes-top-agent-anne-winicki-to-their-team/

#nyc #losangeles #chicago #houston #phoenix #philadelphia #sandiego #dallas #sanfrancisco #seattle #denver #washingtondc #boston #detroit #vancouver #toronto #publicrelations #marketingagency #earnedmedia #editorial #marketing #guestpost #guestposting #sponsored #sponsoredpost #realestateagency #realestateagent

© 2025 Fairmont Post. Published by The Ritz Herald. Editions: Markets Herald • Lincoln Citizen • Madison Graph • Belmont Star • The Hudson Weekly

Address: 1177 6th Avenue, 5th Floor, New York, NY 10036. Removals: pr@fairmontpost.com. Phone: (718) 313-5252. Mon-Fri: 9AM-5PM. Privacy Policy

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Business • Financial
  • Culture • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle • Travel
  • Technology • Science
  • Environment • Conservation
  • FinTech • Blockchain NFT

© 2025 Fairmont Post