Environmental Research Letters (Jan 2023)
Power sector impacts of the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022
- John E T Bistline,
- Maxwell Brown,
- Maya Domeshek,
- Cara Marcy,
- Nicholas Roy,
- Geoffrey Blanford,
- Dallas Burtraw,
- Jamil Farbes,
- Allen Fawcett,
- Anne Hamilton,
- Jesse Jenkins,
- Ryan Jones,
- Ben King,
- Hannah Kolus,
- John Larsen,
- Amanda Levin,
- Megan Mahajan,
- Erin Mayfield,
- James McFarland,
- Haewon McJeon,
- Robbie Orvis,
- Neha Patankar,
- Kevin Rennert,
- Sally Robson,
- Christopher Roney,
- Ethan Russell,
- Greg Schivley,
- Daniel Shawhan,
- Daniel Steinberg,
- Nadejda Victor,
- Shelley Wenzel,
- John Weyant,
- Ryan Wiser,
- Mei Yuan,
- Alicia Zhao
Affiliations
- John E T Bistline
- ORCiD
- Electric Power Research Institute , Palo Alto, CA, United States of America
- Maxwell Brown
- National Renewable Energy Laboratory , Golden, CO, United States of America
- Maya Domeshek
- Resources for the Future , Washington, DC, United States of America
- Cara Marcy
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency , Washington, DC, United States of America
- Nicholas Roy
- ORCiD
- Resources for the Future , Washington, DC, United States of America
- Geoffrey Blanford
- ORCiD
- Electric Power Research Institute , Palo Alto, CA, United States of America
- Dallas Burtraw
- ORCiD
- Resources for the Future , Washington, DC, United States of America
- Jamil Farbes
- Evolved Energy Research , San Francisco, CA, United States of America
- Allen Fawcett
- ORCiD
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency , Washington, DC, United States of America
- Anne Hamilton
- ORCiD
- National Renewable Energy Laboratory , Golden, CO, United States of America
- Jesse Jenkins
- ORCiD
- Princeton University , Princeton, NJ, United States of America
- Ryan Jones
- ORCiD
- Evolved Energy Research , San Francisco, CA, United States of America
- Ben King
- Rhodium Group , Washington, DC, United States of America
- Hannah Kolus
- ORCiD
- Rhodium Group , Washington, DC, United States of America
- John Larsen
- Rhodium Group , Washington, DC, United States of America
- Amanda Levin
- Natural Resources Defense Council , Washington, DC, United States of America
- Megan Mahajan
- ORCiD
- Energy Innovation , San Francisco, CA, United States of America
- Erin Mayfield
- ORCiD
- Dartmouth College , Hanover, NH, United States of America
- James McFarland
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency , Washington, DC, United States of America
- Haewon McJeon
- ORCiD
- KAIST Graduate School of Green Growth & Sustainability , Daejeon, Republic of Korea
- Robbie Orvis
- ORCiD
- Energy Innovation , San Francisco, CA, United States of America
- Neha Patankar
- ORCiD
- Binghamton University , Binghamton, NY, United States of America
- Kevin Rennert
- Resources for the Future , Washington, DC, United States of America
- Sally Robson
- ORCiD
- Resources for the Future , Washington, DC, United States of America
- Christopher Roney
- ORCiD
- Electric Power Research Institute , Palo Alto, CA, United States of America
- Ethan Russell
- Resources for the Future , Washington, DC, United States of America
- Greg Schivley
- ORCiD
- Princeton University , Princeton, NJ, United States of America
- Daniel Shawhan
- ORCiD
- Resources for the Future , Washington, DC, United States of America; Cornell University , Ithaca, NY, United States of America
- Daniel Steinberg
- ORCiD
- National Renewable Energy Laboratory , Golden, CO, United States of America
- Nadejda Victor
- National Energy Technology Laboratory , Pittsburgh, PA, United States of America
- Shelley Wenzel
- Energy Innovation , San Francisco, CA, United States of America
- John Weyant
- Stanford University , Stanford, CA, United States of America
- Ryan Wiser
- ORCiD
- Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory , Berkeley, CA, United States of America
- Mei Yuan
- MIT Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change , Cambridge, CA, United States of America
- Alicia Zhao
- ORCiD
- Center for Global Sustainability, University of Maryland , College Park, MD, United States of America
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ad0d3b
- Journal volume & issue
-
Vol. 19,
no. 1
p. 014013
Abstract
The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) is regarded as the most prominent piece of federal climate legislation in the U.S. thus far. This paper investigates potential impacts of IRA on the power sector, which is the focus of many core IRA provisions. We summarize a multi-model comparison of IRA to identify robust findings and variation in power sector investments, emissions, and costs across 11 models of the U.S. energy system and electricity sector. Our results project that IRA incentives accelerate the deployment of low-emitting capacity, increasing average annual additions by up to 3.2 times current levels through 2035. CO _2 emissions reductions from electricity generation across models range from 47%–83% below 2005 in 2030 (68% average) and 66%–87% in 2035 (78% average). Our higher clean electricity deployment and lower emissions under IRA, compared with earlier U.S. modeling, change the baseline for future policymaking and analysis. IRA helps to bring projected U.S. power sector and economy-wide emissions closer to near-term climate targets; however, no models indicate that these targets will be met with IRA alone, which suggests that additional policies, incentives, and private sector actions are needed.
Keywords