论文标题

电力与大流行:探索Covid-19期间全球电力需求的变化

Power and the Pandemic: Exploring Global Changes in Electricity Demand During COVID-19

论文作者

Buechler, Elizabeth, Powell, Siobhan, Sun, Tao, Zanocco, Chad, Astier, Nicolas, Bolorinos, Jose, Flora, June, Boudet, Hilary, Rajagopal, Ram

论文摘要

了解如何限制对Covid-19的暴露方式的努力改变了电力需求,这不仅可以洞悉巨大的限制如何影响电力需求,而且还涉及到199年后世界中未来的电力使用。我们开发了一个统一的建模框架,以量化和比较2020年1月至2020年1月至58个国家和全球58个国家和地区的电力使用变化。我们发现,与建模需求相比,每天的电力需求在2020年4月下降了多达10%,可控制天气,季节性和时间影响,但差异很大。聚类技术表明,四个影响组捕获了系统的计时和用电深度变化的系统差异,范围从2%的轻度下降到26%的极端下降。这些分组与地理不符,几乎每个大陆都有至少一个国家或地区的需求急剧减少,而没有一个国家。相反,我们发现这种变化与政府的限制和流动性有关。政府限制对需求具有非线性效应,即使限制很容易,通常会在其最限制的水平上饱和。流动性更加尖锐地关注电力需求的变化,而工作场所和住宅移动性与每日水平的需求变化密切相关。用电量的急剧下降与类似于周末使用前使用的工作日小时负载模式有关。量化这些影响是了解大流行和相关社会反应对电力需求的危机的影响的关键第一步。

Understanding how efforts to limit exposure to COVID-19 have altered electricity demand provides insights not only into how dramatic restrictions shape electricity demand but also about future electricity use in a post-COVID-19 world. We develop a unified modeling framework to quantify and compare electricity usage changes in 58 countries and regions around the world from January-May 2020. We find that daily electricity demand declined as much as 10% in April 2020 compared to modelled demand, controlling for weather, seasonal and temporal effects, but with significant variation. Clustering techniques show that four impact groups capture systematic differences in timing and depth of electricity usage changes, ranging from a mild decline of 2% to an extreme decline of 26%. These groupings do not align with geography, with almost every continent having at least one country or region that experienced a dramatic reduction in demand and one that did not. Instead, we find that such changes relate to government restrictions and mobility. Government restrictions have a non-linear effect on demand that generally saturates at its most restrictive levels and sustains even as restrictions ease. Mobility offers a sharper focus on electricity demand change with workplace and residential mobility strongly linked to demand changes at the daily level. Steep declines in electricity usage are associated with workday hourly load patterns that resemble pre-COVID weekend usage. Quantifying these impacts is a crucial first step in understanding the impacts of crises like the pandemic and the associated societal response on electricity demand.

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