Because the challenge of decarbonization is so broad and spans so many departments and initiatives, a portfolio-based approach is the way to best achieve emissions reduction goals. This approach to decarbonization requires:
Segmenting diverse decarbonization opportunities into functional categories
Assessing a broad spectrum of initiatives to reduce carbon
Developing a ranking of portfolio methods and initiatives using metrics that include achievable reduction quantities, lowest cost to achieve, and viability.
By using this type of approach, decarbonization methods can be directly compared based on the most important factors, including:
Carbon reduction potential (tons of avoided CO2e)
Cost per ton of carbon avoided ($/ton of avoided CO2e)
Organizational or process Impacts
Social or community impact
Risks to achieve each reduction goal
Segmenting and assessing decarbonization efforts to better understand your options
Taking a metrics-driven, portfolio-based view of GHG reduction can help utility sustainability teams prioritize their decarbonization investments and develop a strategic roadmap for achieving targets. By segmenting decarbonization efforts into practical categories and assessing them on common and standardized metrics, utilities will have a better understanding of their options to decarbonize, greater access to comparative data, and more information to make smarter decisions.
This can improve the chances of success to maximize GHG emission reductions over time. Selecting the right combination of decarbonization measures—and having a comprehensive strategy to implement those measures—is critical to successful decarbonization. The ideal strategy ultimately will achieve the highest overall emissions reduced with low risk and low or recoverable costs.
A sample breakdown of segmenting decarbonization opportunities might look like this:
- Category 1—Power delivery operations: Generation, transmission & distribution, grid modernization
- Category 2—Company operations: Fleets, buildings, data centers, facilities, employee behavior
- Category 3—Customer GHG: Customer emissions that can be impacted by utility efforts
Utilities must identify and quantify the emissions sources or avoidance methods within each category once they have been established. Calculation frameworks such as the GHG protocol and Science Based Targets Initiative provide methods for doing these calculations, but collecting the necessary data and ensuring accurate and verifiable results require significant effort. Additionally, methods for mitigating emissions must also be assessed according to the risk factors involved, cost to avoid carbon per method, viability of available technology, and impacts to customers or utility operations.
Once all options are understood, they can be compared and considered as a holistic portfolio strategy. Part of this process is understanding how implementing certain initiatives might interact with others. For example, deploying large amounts of renewables on the grid will make transportation electrification efforts more impactful when highly clean electricity is a fuel source. Understanding these nuances enables a more sophisticated approach to decarbonization efforts.
Category 1: Power delivery operations
Electricity generation, which accounts for 25% of annual GHG emissions, is the largest source of carbon emissions in the U.S. and makes a significant amount of a utility’s carbon emissions. Even if a utility company does not generate their own electricity, generation emissions from delivered and used electricity falls under the utility’s scope 2 or 3 emissions.